Rene Hangstrup Møller

472 posts

Rene Hangstrup Møller

Rene Hangstrup Møller

@rhmoller

Frontend architect. I like Java, TypeScript, the web platform, React, GraphQL, UI and graphics programming, hobby game development and drawing.

Århus, Denmark Katılım Haziran 2009
1.8K Takip Edilen289 Takipçiler
daimao
daimao@Ricquert·
@SebAaltonen Am I tripping or does he have the Cesium logo for a head?
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Sebastian Aaltonen
Sebastian Aaltonen@SebAaltonen·
Implemented skinned rendering in WASM mini-engine. Yes, I know the character is sideways. Not a rendering bug. That's how the asset is :)
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Erik Bernhardsson
Erik Bernhardsson@bernhardsson·
My newest stupid idea is we should merge the Scandinavian languages. Let’s invent a new one that’s basically the average language. Mandate that it’s used for all public broadcasts. People would learn it in a few months. 25M speakers.
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Mario Zechner
Mario Zechner@badlogicgames·
we as software engineers are becoming beholden to a handful of well funded corportations. while they are our "friends" now, that may change due to incentives. i'm very uncomfortable with that. i believe we need to band together as a community and create a public, free to use repository of real-world (coding) agent sessions/traces. I want small labs, startups, and tinkerers to have access to the same data the big folks currently gobble up from all of us. So we, as a community, can do what e.g. Cursor does below, and take back a little bit of control again. Who's with me? cursor.com/blog/real-time…
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gingerBill
gingerBill@TheGingerBill·
As weird as it sounds, some people who come to Odin from C miss having header files. Because they use them as a quick way to see what is available within a package. Did you know Odin has an easy way to show this? `odin doc path/to/package` Append `-short` for a terser result.
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Rene Hangstrup Møller
Rene Hangstrup Møller@rhmoller·
@jarredsumner @thdxr Karpathy thinks model sizes will start shrinking as the training data gets better. x.com/karpathy/statu…
Andrej Karpathy@karpathy

LLM model size competition is intensifying… backwards! My bet is that we'll see models that "think" very well and reliably that are very very small. There is most likely a setting even of GPT-2 parameters for which most people will consider GPT-2 "smart". The reason current models are so large is because we're still being very wasteful during training - we're asking them to memorize the internet and, remarkably, they do and can e.g. recite SHA hashes of common numbers, or recall really esoteric facts. (Actually LLMs are really good at memorization, qualitatively a lot better than humans, sometimes needing just a single update to remember a lot of detail for a long time). But imagine if you were going to be tested, closed book, on reciting arbitrary passages of the internet given the first few words. This is the standard (pre)training objective for models today. The reason doing better is hard is because demonstrations of thinking are "entangled" with knowledge, in the training data. Therefore, the models have to first get larger before they can get smaller, because we need their (automated) help to refactor and mold the training data into ideal, synthetic formats. It's a staircase of improvement - of one model helping to generate the training data for next, until we're left with "perfect training set". When you train GPT-2 on it, it will be a really strong / smart model by today's standards. Maybe the MMLU will be a bit lower because it won't remember all of its chemistry perfectly. Maybe it needs to look something up once in a while to make sure.

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Jarred Sumner
Jarred Sumner@jarredsumner·
@thdxr the question in my head is why do they need so many weights what are all the weights doing why can’t they pick more selectively what weights are needed for a prompt? why cant they reuse all the tricks from rendering games?
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Jarred Sumner
Jarred Sumner@jarredsumner·
Can someone explain to me why ~500 tok/s is fast and what in-the-weeds technical constraints prevent 100,000 tok/s at same quality? My gut is there’s incredible waste due to infinite money and in a world w/ 1/10000th of the capital models would be orders of magnitude better
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Steve Ruiz
Steve Ruiz@steveruizok·
@kenwheeler lol I'd love to see ken wheeler videos on tldraw
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Steve Ruiz
Steve Ruiz@steveruizok·
I think the current dev tools market could sustain 3-4 additional content creators, each of whom could make $200K-$1M/year from contracted content.
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Ben Lesh
Ben Lesh@BenLesh·
LOAD “*”,8,1
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Rene Hangstrup Møller
Rene Hangstrup Møller@rhmoller·
Is @AnthropicAI drowning in their success? Claude code (with Opus) feels extra slow and extra stupid compared to two weeks ago. This is in a new project so it is not due to context pollution.
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Rene Hangstrup Møller
Rene Hangstrup Møller@rhmoller·
@Shpigford yes and please stop repeatedly resending your last request to check if the service is back up. move on to something better and let me suffer here alone.
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Josh Pigford
Josh Pigford@Shpigford·
claude code is terrible and everyone should stop using it. yeah. definitely terrible. just close your instance of it and use something else. please.
Josh Pigford tweet media
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Rene Hangstrup Møller
Rene Hangstrup Møller@rhmoller·
Yes it's java compiling to JavaScript. Remember this came out when browser compatibility was a big challenge. Browsers didn't have built-in debuggers and chrome wasn't even out yet. Come to think of it, it actually had a good streak before it was made obsolete. But it is the only web framework I have used where the application outlived the framework
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Ryan Carniato
Ryan Carniato@RyanCarniato·
@rhmoller GWT.. I thought that was Java. Looking deeper I see it compiles Java -> JavaScript. Definitely interesting because I'd bucket this under solutions trying to avoid JavaScript unsuccessfully, which is sort of the otherside of the argument.
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Ryan Carniato
Ryan Carniato@RyanCarniato·
People claim JS frameworks come and go. Sure many are created, but like most software libraries most are never adopted in a serious way anyway. Have you in the last 10 years ever found yourself stuck on a framework no longer actively maintained?
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