Answer.AI

46 posts

Answer.AI

Answer.AI

@answerdotai

A new kind of AI R&D lab which creates practical end-user products based on foundational research breakthroughs

Distributed เข้าร่วม Mart 2024
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Yann LeCun
Yann LeCun@ylecun·
You are a victim of the same delusion as numerous folks who have believed in past decades that superhuman performance by computers in one task was a harbinger of human-level AI. It happened with code generation, math, chatbots, go players, robot acrobats, Jeopardy-playing systems, cars driving themselves in the desert, chess players, inference engines, checker players, compilers, equation solvers....
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ThePrimeagen
ThePrimeagen@ThePrimeagen·
hey, asking for a friend can we stop using lines of code for a measurement in productivity? at one point we all agreed on this
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Pol Avec
Pol Avec@pol_avec·
Today I finished learning my first 1500 Chinese characters! (actually it was on November, but didn't get around writing about it until now). I took the chance to write a far too long review on my learning journey so far. I don't think anyone should read it unless you have a lot of free time or really want to learn a new language (for those who won't heed the warning, the link is below) It is titled: Excuses, Friction & FastHTML: My journey learning 1500 chinese characters because it reflects the most useful lessons learned for me. For context, I'm learning Chinese for family reasons. It's going to be a lifelong project but I only have (or want) to invest 5-30min a day tops. So it is a marathon for me, not a sprint. With this in mind, I set out to find an easy way to learn w/o too much effort. I tried a variety of approaches, like straight our learning the Dao De Jing, immersion in Taiwan, brute-force anki, and audio lessons. Success was mixed, learning happened, but not sustainably which leads me to the first word "Excuses" If you find yourself making excuses not to do it, it's probably because it's not a good method for you. I felt "lazy" because I didn't want to put in the effort, instead I procrastinated by reading how others learned Chinese. Or I kept trying new approaches w/o completing any. However, by being lazy and using that as a guiding light, I kept exploring alternatives until I found a talk by Jeremy Howard that lead me to the wonderful book "Remembering Traditional Hanzi Characters" by James. W. Heisig. ( @jeremyphoward thank you so much for that!) This book is a perfect match for my learning approach because it teaches you characters in a very approachable way, it decomposes them into smaller chunks, gives them visual stories and weaves them into a network that makes learning much easier. If I had "powered through" the other approaches I'd never have found this blessing. I had a math teacher that used to tell us that lazy ones are the clever, because they find better methods to work less by making things easier. Amen. Which leads me to the second word "friction". The method was right, now I needed to just do it every day. The only important lesson here is to minimize the friction as much as possible so it becomes a habit. For example, I got the ebook version so I could review anywhere, I got the anki app for review, I got anki cards for the book so I could just add them easily. If I could write them with pen & paper great, otherwise just use your finger. Setting a very low bar, contrary to some opinions is great. I committed to every **just** review the pending cards. If I had time and energy, I would learn some new ones, maybe 1, 2 or 5, rarely more than that. Thanks to compounding this eventually led me to cross 500, and then 1000 chars. At this point the habit was so deeply ingrained that I found myself doing up to 25 chars/day w/o any extra effort. Once I finished the book, I started trying to read simple stories, or talk to my wife. Looking up words in the book index is super annoying, but it was manageable during the learning. With the book finished, that became a source of friction which led to me... FastHTML. I ended up creating my own lookup page with all the book characters. That way I could look up by char, meaning, or number in the book. Moreover, each char had hyperlinkg to its constituents making review and lookup a pleasure, instead of having to browse through the book (best case) or navigate the ebook (even worse!) when I didn't have the physical copy. Eventually I wanted to learn words with multiple chars, so I added the feature to lookup multiple chars, and then have Gemini explain me how those chars with the meanings attributed to them by the book, gave rise to the final meaning. Absolutely perfect. Sometimes it seems a "waste of time" or "procrastination" to work on the tools or methods, but the opposite is true. The better the tools the easier the process. At the time of writing, I'm connecting the FastHTML app, so any compound word can be added directly to my anki decks, I've transcribed Pimsleur audio lessons so I can review them using the books characters or pop them into ChatGPT Voice mode to practice with the right context. Happy learning, I'll report back when I finish the next 1500.
Pol Avec tweet media
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Answer.AI รีทวีตแล้ว
Pol Avec
Pol Avec@pol_avec·
SolveIT by @answerdotai is by far the best reading experience I've had. Their dialogue approach means you can split the text at any point and just ask questions. You can also run code if you need it, and show/hide selectively stuff to the AI (so it does not get distracted with your rabbit holes). Here's a very basic example: gist.github.com/kafkasl/d76e3b… People are lately reading full form books in a number of different personal approaches
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Jeremy Howard
Jeremy Howard@jeremyphoward·
Great to see @threejs supporting llms.txt. 😀 I have noticed that the majority of libs/services I work with nowadays seem to have an llms.txt nowadays. Makes me happy! (I've been really enjoying the very comprehensive @GeminiApp llms.txt recently for writing Gemini code.)
Three.js@threejs

github.com/mrdoob/three.j…

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Andrej Karpathy
Andrej Karpathy@karpathy·
Agency > Intelligence I had this intuitively wrong for decades, I think due to a pervasive cultural veneration of intelligence, various entertainment/media, obsession with IQ etc. Agency is significantly more powerful and significantly more scarce. Are you hiring for agency? Are we educating for agency? Are you acting as if you had 10X agency? Grok explanation is ~close: “Agency, as a personality trait, refers to an individual's capacity to take initiative, make decisions, and exert control over their actions and environment. It’s about being proactive rather than reactive—someone with high agency doesn’t just let life happen to them; they shape it. Think of it as a blend of self-efficacy, determination, and a sense of ownership over one’s path. People with strong agency tend to set goals and pursue them with confidence, even in the face of obstacles. They’re the type to say, “I’ll figure it out,” and then actually do it. On the flip side, someone low in agency might feel more like a passenger in their own life, waiting for external forces—like luck, other people, or circumstances—to dictate what happens next. It’s not quite the same as assertiveness or ambition, though it can overlap. Agency is quieter, more internal—it’s the belief that you *can* act, paired with the will to follow through. Psychologists often tie it to concepts like locus of control: high-agency folks lean toward an internal locus, feeling they steer their fate, while low-agency folks might lean external, seeing life as something that happens *to* them.”
Garry Tan@garrytan

Intelligence is on tap now so agency is even more important

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Faizaan Gagan
Faizaan Gagan@FznSG·
@asmah2107 With the risk of this looking like a marketing post, worth checking out solve.it.com Built by Jeremy Howard and team at @answerdotai. Geared at effective learning using AI. Lateral opposite of vibe coding. This AI won’t even tell you the answer, but help arrive at it.
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Dreams API
Dreams API@dreamsapi·
The Solve.it.com course from @jeremyphoward & @answerdotai is so good I'm telling friends not to use my 15% discount code. Pay the full $500. They've earned it. Week 1 awesome, and they extended registration till next week. Don't miss this. #programming #education
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Eric Ries
Eric Ries@ericries·
Starting Nov 3, my @answerdotai co-founder @jeremyphoward and I are teaching this hands-on approach in our live Solve It With Code course. Join our free early access list to preview the method (and get a discount). 👉 solve-it-with-code.beehiiv.com
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Jack Hogan
Jack Hogan@j_h0gan·
Most AI tools give the illusion of rapid progress but results that don't surive first contact with testing. The @answerdotai team have done an incredible job designing solveit in a way that makes it genuinely hard to fall into the traps and dead ends of most "vibe coding" tools.
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Jeremy Howard
Jeremy Howard@jeremyphoward·
It's a strange time to be a programmer—easier than ever to get started, but easier to let AI steer you into frustration. We've got an antidote that we've been using ourselves with 1000 preview users for the last year: "solveit" Now you can join us.🧵 answer.ai/posts/2025-10-…
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Jeremy Howard
Jeremy Howard@jeremyphoward·
18 months ago, @karpathy set a challenge: "Can you take my 2h13m tokenizer video and translate [into] a book chapter". We've done it! It includes prose, code & key images. It's a great way to learn this key piece of how LLMs work. fast.ai/posts/2025-10-…
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Jack Hogan
Jack Hogan@j_h0gan·
99% of AI "guidance" online is of the (fantasy) genre "10x your productivity by running parallel Claude Codes that orchestrate sub-Claude-Codes that dynamically spin up sub-sub-Claude-Codes". @jeremyphoward's solveit is the opposite and I can't recommend his course highly enough.
Jeremy Howard@jeremyphoward

It's a strange time to be a programmer—easier than ever to get started, but easier to let AI steer you into frustration. We've got an antidote that we've been using ourselves with 1000 preview users for the last year: "solveit" Now you can join us.🧵 answer.ai/posts/2025-10-…

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Scott H. Hawley
Scott H. Hawley@drscotthawley·
Just enrolled. Howard et al. have been hugely influential on my growth as an ML developer and instructor. Re. cost: their previous courses were all free, so I'm happy to pay for what's sure to be excellent. SU&TMM
Jeremy Howard@jeremyphoward

It's a strange time to be a programmer—easier than ever to get started, but easier to let AI steer you into frustration. We've got an antidote that we've been using ourselves with 1000 preview users for the last year: "solveit" Now you can join us.🧵 answer.ai/posts/2025-10-…

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Carlo Lepelaars
Carlo Lepelaars@carlolepelaars·
The SolveIt course by @answerdotai is open to signups again! Doing the course in March has had a huge impact on how I build projects and code with LLMs. I love it so much I'm joining again to learn new workflows and tricks. You will (most likely) not regret signing up!
Jeremy Howard@jeremyphoward

It's a strange time to be a programmer—easier than ever to get started, but easier to let AI steer you into frustration. We've got an antidote that we've been using ourselves with 1000 preview users for the last year: "solveit" Now you can join us.🧵 answer.ai/posts/2025-10-…

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Radek Osmulski
Radek Osmulski@radekosmulski·
Here is my workflow for doing Machine Learning on remote machines. It features: • execnb, a little-known gem by @answerdotai • tips on using Jupyter Notebook in @code • a workflow based on @LambdaAPI • thoughts on how computing needs of ML practitioners have evolved Link below 👇
Radek Osmulski tweet media
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