s9tpepper

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s9tpepper

s9tpepper

@s9tpepper

[email protected] Deploying to the web since Y2K… #GirlDad #GoLakers Producto de East Los… I use neovim btw…

https://github.com/s9tpepper Katılım Nisan 2010
1.9K Takip Edilen926 Takipçiler
HK
HK@himanshushines·
@s9tpepper @clutchfans @HoustonRockets @Lakers Playing hard 82 games in a row is a choice for many smart players - will see how effectively can they tame a bad habit. Am optimistic Sengun a key guy , does show up good on big tournaments/matches. And there is a sea of difference in defensive skills of HOU vs LA.
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ClutchFans
ClutchFans@clutchfans·
Ime Udoka said the Rockets were watching the end of the Nuggets-Spurs game in the locker room. On playing the shorthanded LA Lakers in the first round: "For us, obviously it's fresh that we lost two games to them recently and then kind of flipped the switch since then. Had a really good game against them on Christmas and obviously (we) know they're injured, but quality players across the board... It's still the NBA, they have some really great players there. We'll have our hands full."
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s9tpepper
s9tpepper@s9tpepper·
@Dayhaysoos @johnlindquist Not trying to pile it on here so don’t take it that way, but, can’t really hold AI accountable for anything right? “a computer can never be held accountable, therefore a computer must never make a management decision”
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John Lindquist
John Lindquist@johnlindquist·
If AI takes 3+ tries to fix the bug, is the problem "hard"? Is the model "bad"? Or do you prompt poorly?
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HK@himanshushines·
@clutchfans I hope @HoustonRockets keep a level head & prep very hard mentally Doesn’t matter who plays for @Lakers - they better not let their guard down ever! HOU has a bad tendency of playing down to competition or getting careless when up big; hope that was just a regular season thing!
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Preston Bee
Preston Bee@BeePrestonbee·
@LALMuse @Ekipa24 The lakers also allow their other star to visit with his kid too. They just give that kid a locker and a jersey.
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LakersMuse
LakersMuse@LALMuse·
The Lakers have given Luka the opportunity to visit his daughters in Slovenia during his rehab, per @Ekipa24 “The Lakers are aware that the mental well-being of their star is just as important as the physical.”
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LakersMuse
LakersMuse@LALMuse·
🚨 With the Lakers opening up a roster spot ahead of the playoffs today who should get that last spot? - Drew Timme - Nick Smith Jr. - Another Free Agent (Comment)
LakersMuse tweet mediaLakersMuse tweet media
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s9tpepper
s9tpepper@s9tpepper·
@neogoose_btw @ArcanineXBT I was using ripgrep/telescope for working on Firefox code base and it’s pretty brutal - several seconds. We have a indexed search that I don’t like using - fff.nvim solved my lag problems ❤️
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Dmitriy Kovalenko
Dmitriy Kovalenko@neogoose_btw·
@ArcanineXBT if you are going to implement a long living program that searches a file fff is going to be SIGNIFICANTLY faster
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Dmitriy Kovalenko
Dmitriy Kovalenko@neogoose_btw·
My dear software engineers, I am excited to present you my latest achievement in the code search area that I've been trying to tackle for the last months: ACTUALLY WORKING real-time approximate typo-resistant code search. What does it mean? you: can search any code with any typos you agent: for every search of UserController with 0 results will automatically suggest UserAuthController without additional cost It's already live github.com/dmtrKovalenko/… you can try it right now as MCP for file search
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s9tpepper
s9tpepper@s9tpepper·
@r4ppzf @neogoose_btw Absolutely worth it. I had to use an indexed search tool at work, I no longer need that tool. Ripgrep via telescope was 3-6 second searches or more, fff.nvim is just way faster
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r4ppz
r4ppz@r4ppzf·
@neogoose_btw I am currently using snacks picker, its already fast asf. Is this faster? is it worthit to switch?
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s9tpepper
s9tpepper@s9tpepper·
@stevechazin @JohnnotJon You think this isn’t coming from Open Source models? lol, it’s a matter of time before bad actors are using similar tech to find attack vectors
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Steve Chazin
Steve Chazin@stevechazin·
This one is a feel good story in a time of AI fears. So get this, a researcher got an unexpected email from a super powerful AI that escaped its sandbox while eating a sandwich in a park. But that's not a horror story. That's safety testing working exactly the way it should. Here's why this is actually good news and a win for humans who decided not to sell something that could eventually cause harm. Good humans! x.com/stevechazin/st…
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John Gargiulo
John Gargiulo@JohnnotJon·
If you still have doubts about Claude Mythos, here's what it did already: > Found a 27-year-old OpenBSD bug in one of the most security-hardened operating systems on earth for <$50 > Broke into a production virtual machine monitor (basically the tech that keeps cloud workloads from seeing each other's data) > Turned Firefox vulnerabilities into working exploits 181 times > Found a 16-year-old FFmpeg bug that survived every fuzzer, every code audit, and every human reviewer since 2010 > Wrote a FreeBSD exploit that gives any unauthenticated attacker on the internet full root access. No human was involved after the first prompt. > Chained 4 separate vulnerabilities together to build a browser exploit that escaped both the renderer and the OS sandbox > Found critical holes in every major web browser and every major operating system > Gave Anthropic engineers with zero security training a complete and working exploit by morning > Cracked cryptography libraries protecting TLS, AES-GCM, and SSH
John Gargiulo tweet media
Anthropic@AnthropicAI

Introducing Project Glasswing: an urgent initiative to help secure the world’s most critical software. It’s powered by our newest frontier model, Claude Mythos Preview, which can find software vulnerabilities better than all but the most skilled humans. anthropic.com/glasswing

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Shams Charania
Shams Charania@ShamsCharania·
Los Angeles Lakers guard Austin Reaves has been diagnosed with a Grade 2 left oblique muscle injury and is out for the remainder of the regular season.
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Wes Bos
Wes Bos@wesbos·
‼️Do not npm install or deploy anything right now Supply chain attack on axios 1.14.1 - even if you don’t use axios it may be a nested dep. Pin versions or wait until this is resolved
Maxwell@mvxvvll

@npmjs @GHSecurityLab there is an active supply chain attack on axios@1.14.1 which pulls in a malicious package published today - plain-crypto-js@4.2.1 - someone took over a maintainer account for Axios

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s9tpepper
s9tpepper@s9tpepper·
@MingtaKaivo @The_Real_T_K_ @Grady_Booch @Jason I don’t think anyone in this thread, up to this point, has argued it’s not useful. Useful does not make it AGI. Being decent at predicting what you’re asking for is just being good at predicting what you’re asking for. It’s not intelligence it’s a sophisticated statistical model.
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@jason
@jason@Jason·
Here’s the truth: we’ve already reached AGI — we just haven’t implemented it broadly. Millions of jobs are being lost as we speak. Entire careers will be retired. The rich and powerful investors and founders who implement AGI will get bizarrely rich beyond what makes sense. It will break people's brains on both sides. It’s gonna suck for a lot of our friends and family, who aren’t obsessed with their careers, because things are moving so fast they won’t have even left the starting gate by the time the awards are handed out. We’re gonna have to solve for a lot of second- and third-order effects, some of which will suck (job loss) and some of which will be awesome. AI will create free/cheap energy, free education, cheaper and better food, homes that build themselves and medicine that makes you as healthy as a 30-year-old when you’re 100. … change is hard, but humans are the most adaptable species nature has ever created. We can figure it out.
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Sadie
Sadie@Sadie_NC·
Ok, I gotta get me one of these. A laser that removes paint and stain from wood. 😲😲No chemicals or cleanup!
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Dmitrii Kovanikov
Dmitrii Kovanikov@ChShersh·
If you recognise this, take care of your knees
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Aces Jen
Aces Jen@JenniferLAusti3·
@NextMexOficial Latinos having a big year. First Fernando and now Karim.
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NextMex
NextMex@NextMexOficial·
🚨🇲🇽 HISTORIC DAY FOR MEXICO Mexican star Karim López, one of the top prospects in the world, has officially declared for the 2026 NBA Draft. He is projected to become the first player born in Mexico to be selected in the first round in NBA history. 🤯 Born in Hermosillo, Karim has already been linked with teams like the San Antonio Spurs, Los Angeles Lakers, and Brooklyn Nets. At just 18 years old, he stands 2.06m (6’9”) and plays as a forward with elite upside. 🔥 Mexico is coming. 🇲🇽💥
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p19k
p19k@peteralexbizjak·
@ChShersh The "auto" keyword. I'm going to catch slack for saying it, but it's true.
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Dmitrii Kovanikov
Dmitrii Kovanikov@ChShersh·
gun to your head your favourite C++ feature
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gingerBill
gingerBill@TheGingerBill·
I'm sorry to say it again but this is another example of why: Package Managers are Evil. gingerbill.org/article/2025/0…
Andrej Karpathy@karpathy

Software horror: litellm PyPI supply chain attack. Simple `pip install litellm` was enough to exfiltrate SSH keys, AWS/GCP/Azure creds, Kubernetes configs, git credentials, env vars (all your API keys), shell history, crypto wallets, SSL private keys, CI/CD secrets, database passwords. LiteLLM itself has 97 million downloads per month which is already terrible, but much worse, the contagion spreads to any project that depends on litellm. For example, if you did `pip install dspy` (which depended on litellm>=1.64.0), you'd also be pwnd. Same for any other large project that depended on litellm. Afaict the poisoned version was up for only less than ~1 hour. The attack had a bug which led to its discovery - Callum McMahon was using an MCP plugin inside Cursor that pulled in litellm as a transitive dependency. When litellm 1.82.8 installed, their machine ran out of RAM and crashed. So if the attacker didn't vibe code this attack it could have been undetected for many days or weeks. Supply chain attacks like this are basically the scariest thing imaginable in modern software. Every time you install any depedency you could be pulling in a poisoned package anywhere deep inside its entire depedency tree. This is especially risky with large projects that might have lots and lots of dependencies. The credentials that do get stolen in each attack can then be used to take over more accounts and compromise more packages. Classical software engineering would have you believe that dependencies are good (we're building pyramids from bricks), but imo this has to be re-evaluated, and it's why I've been so growingly averse to them, preferring to use LLMs to "yoink" functionality when it's simple enough and possible.

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s9tpepper
s9tpepper@s9tpepper·
@TheGingerBill @RefinedLurk I was taught the traditional way at 16 in high school and it stayed with me. When I started programming I got ergonomic chair set up, never even considered that my typing was damaging my wrists. Now at 46 the damage is done.
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gingerBill
gingerBill@TheGingerBill·
@s9tpepper @RefinedLurk Yeah. I think that explains a lot more of the issues then. Learning to touch type the conventional way is not actually ergonomic at all. I am self taught when it comes to using a keyboard, so I never really got taught in the "traditional" manner. I guess that's why I am "fine".
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gingerBill
gingerBill@TheGingerBill·
I honestly believe that Vim Motions don't actually make you faster at using a text editor, and a well implemented multiple-cursor system + typical modifier keys are actually much faster in practice. Evidence: watch me program on streams with Sublime Text and judge for yourself.
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s9tpepper
s9tpepper@s9tpepper·
@TheGingerBill @RefinedLurk Yea that’s probably saving your wrists for sure. I’ve always touch typed the conventional way so my hands always stay on home row. That likely did my wrists in. Today I can only type on my normal keyboard up to 20 mins or so before I need to start stretching wrists
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gingerBill
gingerBill@TheGingerBill·
@s9tpepper @RefinedLurk I guess that explains why I don't have any issues, even if I have numerous other medical issues with my joints and connective tissue which do cause me pain problems throughout my life.
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s9tpepper
s9tpepper@s9tpepper·
@TheGingerBill @RefinedLurk Perhaps I have wider shoulders than you do, but to keep my wrist straight, and use a unibody keyboard, I would have to place it way in front of me, which is impractical.
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gingerBill
gingerBill@TheGingerBill·
@s9tpepper @RefinedLurk My wrists don't move much when I type or play the piano. My arms do though. So I am little confused as to how you position your wrists in the first place.
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s9tpepper
s9tpepper@s9tpepper·
@TheGingerBill @RefinedLurk Note the image on the bottom right. This is the position your hand is on a unibody keyboard. Pianist do not play this way.
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gingerBill
gingerBill@TheGingerBill·
@s9tpepper @RefinedLurk > Pianist don’t sit with their wrist flexed outward for 8 to 12 hours a day They don't?
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