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@Pollack1J
I'm not dead, I'm just resting! Loves: holy grails, shrubberies, spanish inquisition and arguing for the sake of it. Obviously sharing only private opinions.
Switzerland انضم Nisan 2020
106 يتبع46 المتابعون

@Gossip_Goblin Might be two beers I had… or just a human being with great idea, leveraging tools to amplify that. Either way, first time seeing ‘non-slop AI’ good usage here. Very much welcomed difference. Solid stuff!
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@TechOperator Its where I struggle to prove my human %, as used to use ‘-‘ or ‘—‘ in my corpo messages long before AI was even a thing;)
But yeah - to stay sane need to realize fast enough, you are only playing temporary role on a scene. Where it ends - real life starts.
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@archi_tradition Yeah but what is there to do there? The only things I know about Switzerland is that it's expensive and everyone there is depressed with no friends
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Kioto przeżywa teraz prawdziwe oblężenie. W najbardziej znanych miejscach jest pełno turystów. Władzę miasta próbują jakoś rozwiązać ten problem, ale nie idzie im to najlepiej. Zapowiadają jakieś oddzielne droższe bilety na autobusy dla turystów, ale czy to coś zmieni?
Problem wynika głównie z tego, że większość turystów skupia się na tych samych miejscach. Klasyki Kioto takie jak Arashiyama, Kinkakuji, Kiyomizudera, Fushimi Inari i wiele innych są dosłownie zadeptywane przez hordy turystów.
A w Kioto jest naprawdę wiele pięknych miejsc, które wcale nie odstają od tych najbardziej znanych. Wystarczy czasami odejść nieco na bok i zobaczycie zupełnie inny świat bez turystów na każdym rogu.
Rozumiem oczywiście, że wiele osób chce zobaczyć “klasyki”. I z pewnością coś warto zaliczyć z tej listy, ale może też dobrym pomysłem będzie czasami pójść tam, gdzie nikt nie zachęca do wizyty. Odciąży to Kioto, mieszkańców oraz wesprze świątynie, którym pieniądze by się przydały.
Oprowadzamy też po Kioto. Nasz zespół @pojaponii w Kioto pokaże wam takie perełki.
Napisz do nas:
📩podroz@pojaponii.pl
#japonia
#pojaponii
Polski

@sikorskiradek chyba w obliczu trzeciej ale reszta sie zgadza
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@joskiowzz Of course. Helmets are also mandatory and you need to wear cycling shoes or sandals
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A perfect Friday in the Netherlands:
8:00 - Wake up
8:30 - Check portfolio. Down 10%. Pay 36% tax on unrealized gains
9:30 - Pick up wife from her boyfriend’s apartment
10:00 - Receive fine for cycling 2 km/h over the bike speed limit
10:30 - Start work
12:00 - Eat potatoes for lunch
14:00 - Write an angry LinkedIn post about Americans having no work-life balance
14:30 - Mandatory diversity seminar
15:30 - Finish work
17:00 - Apply for a permit to own a second bicycle
21:00 - Eat potatoes for dinner
21:30 - Read article about Europe having the highest quality of life
22:00 - Sleep on a couch because your wife’s boyfriend is staying over
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More than a decade ago, my wife and I visited Switzerland for our honeymoon. On the way back after visiting a Cheese factory, we made a mistake and took the train that was heading in the opposite direction to our destination.
The train was completely empty except one lady sitting in a corner. We were confused about what to do next. She didn't speak English but figured that we were in a spot of bother and immediately pressed a button that ensured that the train stops at the next station, which was a small station in the middle of the countryside of Switzerland. She gestured that we could walk our way back from there to the previous station.
Our walk back was through a small hill in the countryside. Everyrhing was lush green with houses like these along the way. It began to drizzle while we were walking back and we had to wait near one of the houses for the passing shower.
It was a 25-30 minute walk and we eventually returned to our original train station but I still remember almost everything throughout that walk like it was yesterday.
It may sound a bit clichéd but Switzerland truly is like heaven on earth.
✶@echoesofworld
Switzerland countryside
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Senior L7 architect just messaged me from his car in the parking garage
Been there 6 years. Built their entire microservices platform. Makes $340k. Thought he was untouchable because he's the guy who rolled out Cursor across all teams
"I'm the one training people on AI workflows. I'm the one optimizing the prompts. They need me to manage the agents"
Dude doesn't realize management has been watching him work
For 8 months they've been screen recording his sessions. Logging every prompt. Documenting every decision tree. Building a knowledge base of exactly how he architects solutions.
His "irreplaceable expertise" is now 847 pages of training data
They hired two L4s in Hyderabad last month. Paying them $31k each. Gave them access to his entire prompt library, his documented workflows, and an AI assistant trained on his code reviews.
The offshore team is already shipping features 40% faster than his old team of 7 did
He's training his own replacement and calling it "leveraging AI for competitive advantage"
His manager told him yesterday they're "restructuring around AI-native workflows" and his role is being "evolved to focus on strategic oversight"
Translation: 30-day transition period, then PIP, then gone
The knowledge extraction is complete
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Bardzo bym chciał wejść do głowy osoby, która do ogłoszenia sprzedaży domu w Poznaniu w cenie 3 950 000zł pomyślała, że dorzuci fotkę (siebie?) w "chińskim kapeluszu" rozciągając oczy "udając Chińczyka" w saunie. Absolutny banger.
@wapsonn dobre wykopałeś

Polski

@PM_ViktorOrban @donaldtusk Znaczy sie… bedzie ‘Jesien Sredniowiecza’ na wiosne?
Polski

@fannymegan65es Ps. This is lake Oeschinensee (short trip up from Kandersteg). And yes it does look like that.
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@PaxAeterna @PaulSkallas Just don’t forget AI will not replace your customers;)
forbes.com/sites/quickerb…
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It wont be like a tsunami. It took decades for electricity to spread everywhere. AI isn't going to touch most of the service economy or trades until robotics catches up. The reality is, only in tech will AI hit and quickly. Maybe call centers.
Perhaps we just end all the H1B and foreign employment visas and send them all home.
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Dario Amodei just announced the death date of your profession.
At Davos, Anthropic’s CEO said coding as a human skill has 6 to 12 months left. Not as hyperbole. As timeline.
Amodei: “We might be 6 to 12 months away.”
Not prediction. Observation. His engineers already quit writing code.
Amodei: “I have engineers within Anthropic who say: ‘I don’t write any code anymore.’”
They don’t touch syntax. They don’t debug loops. Models generate flawless code. Humans curate, validate, direct. The job isn’t building anymore. It’s conducting.
The transformation happened silently. While bootcamps taught React, the actual profession mutated into something unrecognizable.
Still typing functions manually? You’re not being diligent. You’re already obsolete and haven’t realized it.
Amodei: “We would make models that were good at coding and use that to produce the next generation of model.”
The loop closes. AI writes the code that births superior AI. Recursion without human dependency. Once sealed, progress stops being gated by people. Only by semiconductors.
One year. Requirements to production, fully autonomous. Humans set strategy. Machines execute perfectly, instantly, infinitely.
Syntax is dead. Only intent remains. You don’t build software now. You conceive it with precision, and intelligence manifests it before you finish the thought.
The skill isn’t coding anymore. It’s knowing what to demand in the three seconds before the system delivers something you could never have built yourself.
Your profession didn’t evolve. It evaporated. And the people still learning to code are training for jobs that won’t exist when they graduate.
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