Leonardo Razovic

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Leonardo Razovic

Leonardo Razovic

@LRazovic

🇪🇺 in 🇨🇭 Senior Software Engineer at @amforcag “Be curious, not judgmental” – !Walt Whitman

Zug เข้าร่วม Haziran 2012
699 กำลังติดตาม1K ผู้ติดตาม
Leonardo Razovic
Leonardo Razovic@LRazovic·
Good question! I review a lot of PRs via the UI, and I was looking for a way to: - Filter by reviewer to focus on one person's feedback - Track resolved/unresolved threads locally, before marking them as resolved on GitHub - Click any code link to preview the file without leaving the page - Group threads by file to review systematically So I built a tool that solved my needs and released it publicly, hoping it helps others with the same struggles
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Leonardo Razovic
Leonardo Razovic@LRazovic·
GitHub’s PR UX is terrible when working back-and-forth with coding assistants. So I built Scholion → scholion.amforc.com You’ll get: • Markdown export for whole reviews or single threads • Wide-screen-friendly comments with inline code previews • Reviewer filters and file grouping • Local “done” state, for everyone who likes clearing the board Instead of clicking around GitHub to reconstruct context, you get a readable PR review surface for humans and agents.
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Leonardo Razovic
Leonardo Razovic@LRazovic·
Why Scholion? [SKOH-lee-on] Turns out there's already a word for "pedantic notes scrawled next to someone else's work." Classical scholars called them scholia. We call them PR comments
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Dwayne
Dwayne@CtrlAltDwayne·
The best argument for Rust in 2026 is not memory safety or performance. It is that AI writes better Rust than it writes C++. The compiler feedback loop is so tight that models self-correct in real time. Every error message is a free training signal. Rust was accidentally designed for AI-assisted development 10 years before anyone knew that mattered.
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Leonardo Razovic
Leonardo Razovic@LRazovic·
The Bitter Lesson but for goals, not methods
Rohan Paul@rohanpaul_ai

Yann LeCun's (@ylecun ) new paper along with other top researchers proposes a brilliant idea. 🎯 Says that chasing general AI is a mistake and we must build superhuman adaptable specialists instead. The whole AI industry is obsessed with building machines that can do absolutely everything humans can do. But this goal is fundamentally flawed because humans are actually highly specialized creatures optimized only for physical survival. Instead of trying to force one giant model to master every possible task from folding laundry to predicting protein structures, they suggest building expert systems that learn generic knowledge through self-supervised methods. By using internal world models to understand how things work, these specialized systems can quickly adapt to solve complex problems that human brains simply cannot handle. This shift means we can stop wasting computing power on human traits and focus on building diverse tools that actually solve hard real-world problems. So overall the researchers here propose a new target called Superhuman Adaptable Intelligence which focuses strictly on how fast a system learns new skills. The paper explicitly argues that evolution shaped human intelligence strictly as a specialized tool for physical survival. The researchers state that nature optimized our brains specifically for tasks necessary to stay alive in the physical world. They explain that abilities like walking or seeing seem incredibly general to us only because they are absolutely critical for our existence. The authors point out that humans are actually terrible at cognitive tasks outside this evolutionary comfort zone, like calculating massive mathematical probabilities. The study highlights how a chess grandmaster only looks intelligent compared to other humans, while modern computers easily crush those human limits. This proves their central point that humanity suffers from an illusion of generality simply because we cannot perceive our own biological blind spots. They conclude that building machines to mimic this narrow human survival toolkit is a deeply flawed way to create advanced technology.

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Andy Allen
Andy Allen@asallen·
Designers get this wrong all the time. New tech doesn't need opinionated design. We talk about Design as if it's one thing, but really it supports different purposes depending on a category's maturity. Early tech = "Undesigned" (open & flexible) Growth tech = Design to scale (universal & generic) Mature tech = Design to differentiate (opinionated)
alexey@sekachov

i have one upsetting observation: all the beautifully designed AI tools we’ve seen so far (dot, humane, cobot) were basically dead on arrival, while complex, highly technical products (claude code, openclaw) gain mass adoption in seconds. we're definitely missing something.

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Leonardo Razovic
Leonardo Razovic@LRazovic·
@jakpan @GregusJakub Thank you so much for everything you’ve done for this ecosystem, and for all the great chats at Decoded and Sub0 over the years! Best of luck with your next project 🙏🏻
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Jakub Panik (🐍,💦)
Jakub Panik (🐍,💦)@JakPan·
1/16 Farewell Hydra, see you around. 6 years ago @gregusjakub and I sat in Progressbar Hackerspace, pissed off at AMM inefficiencies and decided to build something better. I'd have burned out from my previous work, was nearly homeless after helping friends for free. Organizing events, building products and hardware. But I knew I wanted to work on real decentralization.
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Leonardo Razovic
Leonardo Razovic@LRazovic·
Every time I compact a conversation, this comes to mind
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Leonardo Razovic
Leonardo Razovic@LRazovic·
The word nostalgia is a neoclassical compound derived from Greek, consisting of νόστος (nóstos), a Homeric word meaning "homecoming", and ἄλγος (álgos), meaning "pain"; the word was coined by a 17th-century medical student to describe the anxieties displayed by Swiss mercenaries fighting away from home.
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antirez
antirez@antirez·
Italian is an intrinsically understandable language, by people and machines.
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Abakcus
Abakcus@abakcus·
Color, clarity, and geometry. An interactive version of Byrne’s The Elements of Euclid (1847) is now online—and beautiful. c82.net/euclid/
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Abakcus
Abakcus@abakcus·
You can add coffee stains to your LaTeX documents. 👇 ctan.org/pkg/coffeestai…
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CR1337
CR1337@CR1337·
When Meta trains it models on 80+ TB of pirated books from LibGen and other platforms, it's called 'fair use', without them having to pay penalties and / or receive some form of legal punishment, as proceedings are ongoing. When Aaron Swartz downloaded 70 GB of articles from JSTOR in 2010 he was facing a $1M fine and 35 years in prison, before taking his life in 2013.
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Josep
Josep@Joseptec·
We have an expression in Catalan that roughly translates to: They’re pissing on us and telling us it’s raining. That's exactly how I feel right now.
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Bramus
Bramus@bramus·
🌟 Vertical Tabs are available behind a flag in Chrome 145 (current beta) 1. Go to `chrome://flags/#vertical-tabs` 2. Set it to enabled 3. Relaunch Chrome 4. Right click the tabbar and choose “Move Tabs To The Side” Attached are before and after screenshots.
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