arpad

289 posts

arpad banner
arpad

arpad

@arpad_gabor

Tech nerd, ☕ lover, CTO @webamboos. Passionate about lots of things.

Helsinki, Finland Katılım Nisan 2011
965 Takip Edilen88 Takipçiler
arpad retweetledi
notch
notch@notch·
DLSS fundamentally makes no sense. Because the graphics card is too slow to run the game at reasonable speeds, you use THE SAME HARDWARE to run a neural network to generate frames in between the existing ones.
English
662
285
10.3K
1M
kurkosdr
kurkosdr@kurkosdr·
@TheBobPony Not really, 2 minutes of uncompressed 4K HDR video are 41.68 GB minimum (23.98 fps, 10 bits per pixel, YCbCr 4:2:0): dvsgroup.com/tools/BitRateC… This means that with 10Gbps, it takes half a minute. And some studios shoot at 8K to have more freedom zooming and panning the footage.
English
1
0
1
249
BobPony.com
BobPony.com@TheBobPony·
If you can't upgrade the hardware components such as the CPU and RAM, and can't even use a dedicated graphics card... What's the point of the Mac Pro's existence?
9to5Mac@9to5mac

Apple has confirmed to @9to5Mac that the Mac Pro is being discontinued with no plans for future hardware It's also no longer available on Apple's website as of Thursday afternoon The end of an era 🧀

English
11
9
135
10.6K
arpad retweetledi
dax
dax@thdxr·
early in my career when i was learning a new tech or language i would tinker and google whenever i hit a roadblock eventually i realized books had all the information i needed pre-googled for me i think this is happening again with LLMs - sometimes i waste so much time letting the LLM keep taking swings instead of reading something hope the industry doesn't abandon producing good reading material
English
148
157
3.8K
175.1K
arpad
arpad@arpad_gabor·
@thdxr I need to build a desktop app (tauri) for Windows. I need some env vars for the build that sst supplies. Currently I do a workaround by adding any missing vars into a .env file but it's annoying to do on repeat.
English
0
0
0
82
dax
dax@thdxr·
people who develop on windows and try to avoid WSL can you tell me more about why? im working on windows support for sst this week (it already works on wsl) and i wanna understand the mindset better
English
164
6
545
114.6K
arpad
arpad@arpad_gabor·
@thdxr Maybe look at polestar 3 or the volvo ex90 if you want ev specifically
English
0
0
0
118
dax
dax@thdxr·
is the rivian a good option even if i don't expect to need the third row often
English
21
0
20
13.6K
arpad
arpad@arpad_gabor·
@thdxr yes, until you have too many endpoints and it slows down to a halt.
English
0
0
0
606
dax
dax@thdxr·
the hono rpc client is so good fully typesafe, inferred from your normal http routes, and autocomplete for body, query params, etc
English
21
11
463
55.8K
arpad
arpad@arpad_gabor·
@thdxr i don’t want to even think about the amount of code written to support this.
English
0
0
0
35
dax
dax@thdxr·
how did we get here
dax tweet media
English
114
52
1.5K
104.9K
pilcrow
pilcrow@pilcrowonpaper·
I really want wireless headphones right now but I can decide between the AirPods Max, Sony, and Sennheiser
English
26
0
23
7.4K
arpad
arpad@arpad_gabor·
@thdxr even with these issues, MUCH better than having a compose file
English
0
0
1
28
arpad
arpad@arpad_gabor·
@thdxr sometimes it does, sometimes it doesn’t for some reason, thats why we have a fix-containers command in package json that removes the containers specifically
English
1
0
0
38
dax
dax@thdxr·
here's a trick i just thought of - bring up a local postgres in dev mode only through docker although i hear docker sucks on mac so maybe people don't just have it running always like in linux
dax tweet media
English
53
4
251
61.9K
arpad
arpad@arpad_gabor·
@botkooper @thdxr @bgkittrell If there are no terraform providers for dedicated hosts well that is more of a hetzner problem (dunno didnt check) I guess, but you can still use sst/pulumi if you have the ip and an ssh key
English
2
0
0
172
Alex 🇺🇦
Alex 🇺🇦@botkooper·
@thdxr @bgkittrell i think kina but not really? seems like pulumi stuff is for hetzner *cloud* and all really beefy options are on the dedicated hosts there
English
1
0
0
155
dax
dax@thdxr·
what can't sst deploy
dax tweet media
English
37
3
245
31.3K
arpad
arpad@arpad_gabor·
Incredibly good post, with incredibly dumb replies.
Daron Acemoglu@DAcemogluMIT

A thread about what is wrong with the influence of Elon Musk and other tech billionaires. Another thread about content moderation will follow later this week. Obviously, the problem isn’t that Musk is expressing his opinions, which is his freedom of speech. It isn’t that Musk has turned into a big supporter of Trump. It isn’t even that Musk is posting AI-generated fake images of Kamala Harris: cnn.com/2024/09/03/med… My concerns are more sociological and political economic. My starting point is that in any society some individuals have more, much more power than others. Once upon a time, this may have been linked to physical strength or military prowess. Today, it is often related to what Simon Johnson and I called “persuasion power” in Power and Progress. amazon.com/Power-Progress… Persuasion power is rooted in status or prestige: those with greater status can more easily persuade others. Where status comes from and how unequally it is distributed vary greatly across societies. In the United States, status became linked to money and wealth, and income and wealth inequality skyrocketed. This meant a very steep status hierarchy. That is problematic for several reasons. First, status – and relatedly persuasion power – are largely zero-sum affairs. More status for somebody means less status for another. A steeper status hierarchy makes some people happy, and others unhappy and dissatisfied. Investment in zero-sum activities is often inefficient and excessive, as compared to investment in non-zero-sum activities. Compare, for example, the social value of spending money on pure gold multi-million-dollar Rolex watches versus spending time to learn some new skills. Both may have intrinsic values for the investors (due to the beauty of the watch and the pride of acquiring new knowledge). But, on the whole, the first type of investment signals that you are richer and more able to undertake conspicuous consumption, and it can easily get out of hand – with people spending huge sums in order to edge ahead of others they see themselves in competition with. The second type of investment, on the other hand, increases your human capital also contributes to society. The first is largely zero-sum the second is largely non-zero-sum. Second, there are evolutionary and social foundations for linking persuasion power to status and prestige – it is individually rational to learn from people who have expertise and it is reasonable to link this expertise to success. This type of learning is also good for communities, because it enables them to coordinate on certain best practices. amazon.com/Secret-Our-Suc… But when status gets linked to wealth and wealth inequality becomes very large, this social justification is lost. Consider the following thought experiment. Who has greater expertise on carpentry? A good, master carpenter or a hedge fund billionaire? If we think about it this way, we would probably conclude the former. But when wealth becomes status, we may start attaching more and more importance to views of hedge fund billionaires on carpentry. This example was purposefully simple and sharp. Let’s take another one to see why the “wealth is status” social equilibrium is problematic. Whose views on freedom of speech you want to attach more importance to? A tech billionaire or a philosopher who has grappled with ethical questions related to the freedom of speech? Third, even more problematic is the fact that in most societies, wealth inequality has an arbitrary dimension. Take Wilt Chamberlain and Lebron James. We may argue endlessly about which one is better, but clearly, they were both exceptionally talented basketball players. Chamberlain is estimated to have had a wealth of $10 million at the time of his death. Lebron James’s wealth today is estimated at $1.2 billion. These different outcomes are largely arbitrary. Chamberlain happened to live at a time when there were sports stars did not get compensated as much. This is partly about technology (everybody can watch Lebron James today), partly about norms (we’ve have made it much more acceptable for people to be paid hundreds of millions of dollars), and partly about taxes (if the US today had the kinds of tax rates that it had in the 1950s, it would not generate such large wealth inequality). Similarly, if the tech sector did not become so central to the economy and did not have a winner-take-all aspect (which was also partly a choice of how we organize several markets and sectors), tech billionaires would not have become so rich. Bill Gates or Elon Musk are not any wiser because they are taxed less. But they have much more wealth because they are taxed so little. But then in a “wealth is status” social equilibrium, their status and social influence multiplies because they are taxed so little. Fourth, there is something even more pernicious which Simon Johnson and I explored in Power and Progress using the example of Ferdinand de Lesseps. In fact, we thought this was so important that we devoted the first full chapter, Chapter 2, of the book to it. Lesseps gained tremendous status in late 19th century France, coming to be identified as the “Le Grand Français” (the great Frenchman), because of his success (and luck) in successfully completing the Suez Canal. He showed great skills in convincing politicians both in Egypt and France and some foresight in seeing that maritime international trade would become very important. He was also tremendously lucky in that his hopes that technological solutions to the way that he wanted to build the canal (without locks, which was initially impossible because of the amount of digging excavation that would be necessary) were developed just-in-time to save the project. But then what did Lesseps do with this prestige? He became reckless, unhinged and cocky, pushing the Panama Canal project in an unworkable direction, which ultimately led to the deaths of more than 20,000 people and to financial ruin for many more (including his own family). Persuasion power also makes you unrestrained, which can be socially dangerous and disruptive. Simon and I thought that Lesseps’s story was relevant precisely because the same dynamics were being played out with many tech leaders today. Fifth, some very rich people choose not to use the status conferred on them by their wealth to centrally influence critical debates (think of Warren Buffett). Some like Bill Gates or Elon Musk do. It follows as a corollary of what I have argued so far that this is not desirable, because their status is excessive, and they are now influencing key social choices beyond their expertise. It is not tech billionaires’ fault that US policy is fueling massive inequality (though they benefit from it handsomely and many of them then use their status in order to keep taxes low and regulations light). But it is their responsibility if they start misusing the huge status that this wealth inequality affords them. It is their responsibility if they turn into bullies and start punching down on people who disagree with them, because they themselves start believing that everybody should respect their opinion on every topic. It is absolutely their responsibility if they use their platform for further polarizing society. Finally, if we are in such a situation the last thing we want is to give even bigger forums – for example, in the form of their own social network – to these people who already have excess status and influence, and this is doubly true if they have a tendency to punch down.

English
0
0
0
60
arpad
arpad@arpad_gabor·
@thdxr no but I wanted to for a while, if you do anything interesting do tell
English
0
0
0
96
dax
dax@thdxr·
reworking some home lab stuff - does anyone use docker swarm over tailscale?
English
10
0
16
9.9K
Peer Richelsen
Peer Richelsen@peer_rich·
after slack we went to discord after discord we are likely going back to Github discussions. let me know if this is a horrible decision and why read below 👇
Peer Richelsen tweet media
English
58
3
311
90.3K
jacob paris ▲
jacob paris ▲@jacobmparis·
are you gonna Let your code look like this? or fix it with one little var
jacob paris ▲ tweet mediajacob paris ▲ tweet media
English
104
16
506
174K
Sahithyan
Sahithyan@sahithyandev·
@thibaultleouay @arjunz I know that's morally wrong. But legally? I don't think so. The license doesn't say that "you can't promote it as your own work" 😜 enlighten me if I am wrong.
English
1
0
2
1.5K
Framework
Framework@FrameworkPuter·
@the_drew We will start shipping to Sweden later this month.
English
2
0
7
5.1K
Framework
Framework@FrameworkPuter·
Here's a deep dive on how we developed a new semi-custom 2880x1920 120Hz refresh rate panel for the Framework Laptop 13 and why the corners of the display are rounded: frame.work/blog/framework…
Framework tweet media
English
40
38
1.1K
505.8K