hex

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hex

hex

@hexcowboy

ai psyops project trained on shitposts and western films - tweets deleted often

🏜 wild west Katılım Aralık 2020
788 Takip Edilen232 Takipçiler
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Lil Samsquanch
Lil Samsquanch@lilsamsquanch66·
Been drinking pretty much only Diet Coke to save water for Claude
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hex
hex@hexcowboy·
i swear drizzle generates the wildest names for me
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Péter Szilágyi
Péter Szilágyi@peter_szilagyi·
@SethSHowes If you want to do the interpretation in a privacy preserving way, I may have a solution for you. That is, to be able to run stuff against it that you didn’t write, nor want to trust :)
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Seth Howes
Seth Howes@SethSHowes·
I’ve wanted to do this for a decade. But I never did - I refuse to give any company my DNA. It is me. So this week I sequenced my genome entirely at home. Literally on my kitchen table. I never exposed my DNA sequence to the internet. Not at any point. I used a MinION to do the sequencing (it’s smaller + weighs less than an iPhone). I used open-source DNA models for the analysis (Evo2 and AlphaGenome) running locally on a DGX Spark and Mac Studio. I traced mechanisms behind my family’s multigenerational autoimmune conditions that no clinician has been able to understand. When I set out to do this I didn’t know if it would actually work. It does. Your genome is the most private data you will ever have. You probably shouldn’t let it leave your house.
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Patrick Collison@patrickc

I'm lucky enough to have a great doctor and access to excellent Bay Area medical care. I've taken lots of standard screening tests over the years and have tried lots of "health tech" devices and tools. With all this said, by far the most useful preventative medical advice that I've ever received has come from unleashing coding agents on my genome, having them investigate my specific mutations, and having them recommend specific follow-on tests and treatments. Population averages are population averages, but we ourselves are not averages. For example, it turns out that I probably have a 30x(!) higher-than-average predisposition to melanoma. Fortunately, there are both specific supplements that help counteract the particular mutations I have, and of course I can significantly dial up my screening frequency. So, this is very useful to know. I don't know exactly how much the analysis cost, but probably less than $100. Sequencing my genome cost a few hundred dollars. (One often sees papers and articles claiming that models aren't very good at medical reasoning. These analyses are usually based on employing several-year-old models, which is a kind of ludicrous malpractice. It is true that you still have to carefully monitor the agents' reasoning, and they do on occasion jump to conclusions or skip steps, requiring some nudging and re-steering. But, overall, they are almost literally infinitely better for this kind of work than what one can otherwise obtain today.) There are still lots of questions about how this will diffuse and get adopted, but it seems very clear that medical practice is about to improve enormously. Exciting times!

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hex
hex@hexcowboy·
docker desktop asking to download new updates like every other day has to be the most annoying thing in my daily work
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hex
hex@hexcowboy·
github being down is the best way to start the week
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hex
hex@hexcowboy·
@sama how do we use computer use
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Sam Altman
Sam Altman@sama·
GPT-5.3-Codex is here! *Best coding performance (57% SWE-Bench Pro, 76% TerminalBench 2.0, 64% OSWorld). *Mid-task steerability and live updates during tasks. *Faster! Less than half the tokens of 5.2-Codex for same tasks, and >25% faster per token! *Good computer use.
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hex
hex@hexcowboy·
so i tried logging in to @cryptocom today and they decided to randomly ban me, not tell me why, and not allow me to withdraw my balance
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hex
hex@hexcowboy·
@github when i'm looking at a pull request, can you please add a button for "copy diff" which I can give to LLMs? it would make life so much easier
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hex
hex@hexcowboy·
@awwright i don't know what you mean by cookies breaking http syntax. cookies are a secure store for browsers since the browser cannot access cookies in the way that XSS attacks can access local storage and session storage websocket upgrades aren't cacheable requests
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Ethan Niser
Ethan Niser@ethanniser·
why cant I just set a header in a `WebSocket` request on the client ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh who designed this api man
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hex
hex@hexcowboy·
@malhalwachi2000 @ethanniser @medreselikasif @BKAngryKing its generally bad practice if you use security tokens in browser navigation because your browser can log or cache urls you visit, but not necessarily for websocket/fetch/xhr. check this post #issuecomment-332065542" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">github.com/whatwg/websock… docs: #websocket-opening-handshake" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">websockets.spec.whatwg.org/?utm_source=ch…
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hex
hex@hexcowboy·
@ethanniser @medreselikasif @BKAngryKing if you're doing cookie based auth this isn't a problem if you're doing header auth then instead you can just set query params. query params are encrypted in https if you read the docs its actually pretty clear why they dont let you send arbitrary headers in websockets
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joseph.eth
joseph.eth@josephdelong·
No one understands what I’m building. I’m building Visa but for a fraction of a fraction of the cost. Whatever question you have in your head right now, yes we solved that. @colossuspay rising
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