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I would imagine that’s SOP at this point.

[flagged]


I'm not worked up at all about the auto-pen. But presidents should not be pardoning friends and family (although friends seem to get pardoned quite frequently). If a president feels it's important to do so, that president should wait until they are an ex-president and petition the next person in power.

Even that doesn't seem appropriate. Nixon resigned knowing that his VP would take over and pardoned him. It still seems self-serving.

Even referencing the auto pen nonsense pens(ha) you as irrational.

yep. Politicians have been using them for over 100 years, including Thomas Jefferson. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autopen

When are they going to release Hunter Biden's laptop? The FBI has it. (supposedly)

Can you share a link to her saying that?

>Sometimes I think my opinion means nothing on these topics, especially when it's going to get buried in a thread of 500 plus comments.

Use flameview: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25713858

Life-changing for HN users.


Same recruitment pool (like same "hiring pool" / market segment). Therefore, competing.

I wonder how many of Gulf War II's 17-19-year-olds they'll get to re-enlist.

So I know you're making a joke/statement about how the post-9/11 volunteers got royally screwed over and are (understandably) disillusioned with war but I just wanted to add something here.

This change increases maximum enlistment age. Maximum reenlistment age is something else entirely. To reenlist, you need to be able to complete 20 years of service by age 62. So if you joined at 18 and did 8 years then you can technically rennlist up to age 50. Not that you would or should but you can.


With all the posts lately about Karpathy's autoresearch, it remains unclear to me whether this name is intended to convey that this LLM-codebase should be useful for research across all domains - like molecular biology, aircraft control, sociological, ww2 history, etc. or is it intended only to discover new LLM capabilities.

joke’s on the survivors who have to go find sunlight in nuclear winter

Solar panels and the parts to build a hydro generator, then. A hydro generator would also be good incentive to plan around a reliable water source, without which all bets are off anyway.

Oh do you mean a water source replenished by the hydrologic cycle, powered by (checks notes) the __?

While we're on that, for how long will water sources remain in liquid phase?


Some part of my brain filtered out nuclear winter, which cannot reasonably be prepped for by individuals or small groups. However, that is just one, relatively unlikely, thing to prep for. Most other disasters are shorter-lived, and have a great deal of overlap in effective mitigation strategies. Prepping, in my mind, is not only practically useful for various classes of emergencies, but is good mental exercise for understanding supply chains and what's actually needed in the sort, medium, and long term. It can also be good for sharpening skills that benefit others and build community, which in many ways is more rewarding than knowing that you'll be the sole survivor. Prepping doesn't, and shouldn't, look like Burt from Tremors (as amusing as that may be).

I'm being a bit glib anyway; call it gallows humor to help me process currents events. Even worldwide, long-lasting nuclear winter must passes & settle eventually, and such sunlight-enabled microfiche files could be useful to subsequent generations if not earlier.

Fellow survivor on a bicycle which powers a lightbulb by which you can read the microfiche. Voila.

For anyone who never watched the original Soylent Green movie, it's worth a rewatch because it actually shows a future where people are having to make do without a power grid in cities, by doing things like riding a stationary bike hooked up to a generator to power their TV or radio long enough to get some news.


Anyone who thinks they can prepare for nuclear winter is delusional.

I mean, there's got to be a spectrum of nuclear winters, just like there's a spectrum of volcanic and impact winters. Assuming a full scale nuclear war, there's still questions of how much of the arsenals actually detonate(as opposed to failures to launch, getting destroyed by other nukes first, etc), how much the fires burn, the time of year impacting fires and dust and the state of the biosphere, and how much the aerosols are limited to the northern vs southern hemisphere.

Think about all the ways you could die from nuclear war + winter. There's some worth avoiding(slow painful death from radiation, moderate burns, trapped in collapsed buildings, etc), and others that you might be willing to delay/prevent in a hope of things getting better(starvation, cancer, civil unrest, etc). There are ways you can reasonably prepare to increases your chances, if you're lucky in the critical moment of nukes dropping, to survive long enough to attempt forming communities and farming again.


I suppose you could have a gasoline powered battery and then charge electronics with that, no?

Stationary exercise bike, large hobby BLDC motor (or random PMAC motor from some AC appliance) plus some diodes (fullbridgerectifier meme goes here) to rectify the generated voltage. :)

I never thought much of Adrian Gage as a director anyway


I solved the tangle issue going on years now with this: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07Z8G6VH4?ref_=ppx_hzsearch_conn_...

You accustom to the wrap-unwrap motion and then that's it.


Since I'm yet to seriously dive into vibe coding or AI-assisted coding, does the IDE experience offer tracking a tally of the context size? (So you know when you're getting close or entering the "dumb zone")?


The 2 I know, Cursor and Claude Code, will give you a percentage used for the context window. So if you know the size of the window, you can deduce the number of tokens used.


Claude code also gives you a granular breakdown of what’s using context window (system prompt, tools, conversation history, etc). /context


In Claude code I believe it's /context and it'll give you a graphical representation of what's taking context space


> Since I'm yet to seriously dive into vibe coding or AI-assisted coding

Unless you’re using a text editor as an IDE you probably have already


Cline gives you such a thing. you dont really know where the dumb zone by numbers though, only by feel.


Most tools do, yes.


OpenCode does this. Not sure about other tools


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