part time titter

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part time titter

part time titter

@parttitter

tired of being apparently a baggie

Katılım Ocak 2021
1.9K Takip Edilen108 Takipçiler
part time titter
part time titter@parttitter·
@gfodor @bendee983 I find llms very useful for almost anything, also related to coding, but not coding itself. Writing good prompt for task at hand takes as much time as coding it yourself
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gfodor.id
gfodor.id@gfodor·
@bendee983 This kind of thing is starting to read like a form of question begging - yes, if you continue to operate the way you would 2-3 years ago, then you can no longer do your job. But what happens if you actually use your engineering skills to work the problem, leveraging new tools?
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Ben Dickson
Ben Dickson@bendee983·
One of the problems with AI coding is that the narrative on X (and other social media platforms) is mostly set by people who don't have the deep coding and software engineering experience of the likes of Bjarne Stroustrup. Meanwhile the fundamental problems remain unaddressed: 1- AI generates super-human volumes of code 2- The code can be buggy, have security holes, be inefficient, etc. 3- The person who owns the code can be mostly unaware that such problems exist, so they won't even go after fixing them 4- The people who can actually fix the code (i.e., the software engineers who understand design, architecture, security best practices, etc.) are so overwhelmed that some of them will give up Meanwhile, AI companies are constantly pushing the narrative that you don't need to look at the code and the AI will fix everything itself. What they don't tell you is that if your code fails, you'll be held accountable, not them.
Haider.@haider1

Creator of C++, Bjarne Stroustrup: AI-generated code isn't ready — it generates more bugs, more bloat, more security holes, and is nearly impossible to validate "senior developers are already retiring rather than deal with it" The problem is that even a small prompt change can shift the entire codebase in unpredictable ways

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Brett Adcock
Brett Adcock@adcock_brett·
Livestream Day 4 has begun. We've been running F.03 humanoid robots 24/7 - fully autonomous, no breaks, and no downtime x.com/i/broadcasts/1…
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eigenrobot
eigenrobot@eigenrobot·
asking people to read ai-generated text is offensive. this is not because ai text is intrinsically bad. rather, the author has not paid a cost to write the text himself. this cost is a credible signal he finds its communication important. so: not paying that cost is telling
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unusual_whales
unusual_whales@unusual_whales·
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang was spotted eating Beijing’s famous fried bean sauce noodles.
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Jessie Frazelle
Jessie Frazelle@jessfraz·
Never trust a skinny chef Never trust a buff programmer
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ً@prinkasusa·
“Women are bad drivers.” Men pay higher car insurance rates in many places because statistically they cause more fatal crashes.
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Andy Kong
Andy Kong@oldestasian·
Anyone who thinks they're going to replace their Whoop with the Fitbit Air should take a good hard look at Google Health's API — all data ever collected by Fitbit is encoded in *user-local time* without timezone info and thus cannot be aligned with any other data source
Andy Kong tweet media
Google Health@googlehealth

Gives new meaning to “light as a feather.” Pre-order your lightweight, smart, screenless Google #FitbitAir starting at $99.99¹: goo.gle/4cZ8JNv Available May 26. ¹Price varies depending on territory.

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Hedgie
Hedgie@HedgieMarkets·
🦔Residents living near AI data centers are reporting constant low-frequency hum measured as infrasound, sound below the human hearing threshold that causes dizziness, nausea, vertigo, and sleep disruption. The noise comes from cooling systems and onsite gas turbines hyperscalers are building behind-the-meter to bypass slow grid interconnects. Local zoning rules do not regulate infrasound because traditional noise ordinances only measure decibels in the audible range, leaving residents with no legal recourse. The video below captures what households near these facilities are living with around the clock. My Take The infrasound problem does not exist in the regulations because the technology producing it at scale did not exist when the rules were written, and developers know exactly which rural jurisdictions lack the framework to push back. Households who bought before the data center was announced get to choose between selling at a loss or living with symptoms that did not exist a year ago, and that cost is being externalized onto people who never agreed to host critical infrastructure for the AI buildout. Hedgie🤗
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part time titter
part time titter@parttitter·
Bill of Rights was probably a mistake
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Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
🚨 I HAVE NO MICROPLASTICS IN MY BALLS 🚨 This should not be possible. Studies show that 100% of men have microplastics in their semen. I am the first human ever to show a complete reduction to zero. This may be a world-first breakthrough in fertility research. I had 165 microplastic particles in my semen just 18 months ago. Now, I have zero. Five published studies have measured microplastics in human semen. Two found them in 100% of men. The other three found then in 44 to 76% of men tested, but those used methods that miss the smallest particles and the clear ones. Corrected for that, the real rate is likely 100%. Almost every man alive has plastic in his semen right now. The same applies to testicular tissue, testing 100% positive for microplastics. Microplastics hurt sperm. Human studies show the impact of various types of plastic, associated chemicals, and other toxins on male fertility: + 60% fewer normal shaped sperm (from PFAS) + 5x higher odds of low sperm count (from PTFE) + 10% lower sperm concentration (from PTFE) + 15% lower swimming ability (from PTFE) + 41% lower swimming ability (from PET) + 12% lower sperm swimming ability (from BPA) + 3x higher odds of low sperm count (from Phthalates) + 2x higher odds of poor swimming (from Phthalates) The effects compound: each extra type of plastic drops sperm swimming ability by about 21%. This matters even if you’re NOT trying to get pregnant. Sperm count is one of the cleanest biomarkers of overall health we have. And microplastics don't stop at the testes. The same particles are showing up everywhere we look. Studies show 4.5x higher rate of heart attack, stroke, and death in people with microplastics in their arterial plaque vs. those without. Microplastics were also found in 100% of human placentas tested. 100% of post-mortem human brains tested positive for microplastics. Brain concentrations rose ~50% between 2016 and 2024, and now sit at roughly 11x the levels found in the liver or kidney. Where do these come from? + PTFE, commonly in non-stick pans + PET, water bottles + Phthalates, makes plastic soft and bendy + BPA, can linings + PFAS, stain-resistant fabrics & food packaging Inside the body, plastic causes a kind of cellular rust. It triggers inflammation in the testicles, kills the cells that make sperm and drops testosterone. It's been confirmed across 39 animal and cell studies, then in human data. MY PROTOCOL: Note, what I did is n=1, not a controlled trial, I cannot prove cause. 1. Sauna (dry). My toxin blood panel confirms sauna clears plastic related chemicals: BPA, phthalates, PFAS, flame retardants, pesticides. The plastic particles themselves are too big to sweat out directly. Heat may activate other clearance routes: bile flow through the liver, the cell's internal cleanup system, and the gut barrier. Humans have almost no enzymes that can break plastic apart, so the body has to physically push it out. 2. Reverse osmosis water filter. Drinking water is likely a major source of microplastic getting into your body. A reverse osmosis filter pushes water through a very tight membrane and strains the particles out. I filter everything I drink. 3. Trying to rid my environment of the big plastic items: cutting boards, cups, plates, food storage containers, non-stick pans, cling wrap, tea bags, water bottles, kitchen utensils, kettles, and synthetic clothing. Note, as hard as I try, I'm always finding new plastic things in my life. This can be all-consuming thing so try to just knock out the big ones. I did all three interventions at the same time. I cannot say which one did the most work. What I can say is this: going from 165 to zero in 18 months is possible. Results: Nov 2024: 165 particles/mL Jul 2025: 20 particles/mL Apr 2026: 0 particles/mL The 18 month window also captures roughly 7 full spermatogenesis cycles.
Bryan Johnson tweet media
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part time titter retweetledi
part time titter
part time titter@parttitter·
@Kalshi Silicon Valley execs: AI is going to take all your jobs Reality: weather app stops working
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Kalshi
Kalshi@Kalshi·
JUST IN: Apple's weather app is down worldwide
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DUA LIPA
DUA LIPA@DUALIPA·
Weekend in Warszawa 🇵🇱🥟
DUA LIPA tweet mediaDUA LIPA tweet mediaDUA LIPA tweet mediaDUA LIPA tweet media
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part time titter
part time titter@parttitter·
@jacobrodri_ Poland's effective is 60% And it's all just to support ultra corrupt and incompetent government
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Jacob Rodri
Jacob Rodri@jacobrodri_·
How is it legal to make $10k/month and lose nearly 50% to taxes? Europe is finished
Jacob Rodri tweet media
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Jon Yongfook
Jon Yongfook@yongfook·
There’s some PM at Instagram looking at the metrics of ads that people accidentally click on thinking “wow I’m doing a great job”.
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