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At least on my iPhone the theme aesthetic is great.

Similar to Google and Wikipedia lessons back in my day.

Yep I’ve seen multiple instances of this so far.

Yeah, I got the AI to convert some code that ran at 30fps in Javascript to C, and it resulted in a program that generated 1 frame every 20 seconds. Then I told it to optimize it, and now it's running at 1 fps. After going back and forth with the AI for hours, it never got faster than 1 fps. I guess I'm "doing it wrong" as the hypesters like to tell me.

> Yeah, I got the AI to convert some code that ran at 30fps in Javascript to C, and it resulted in a program that generated 1 frame every 20 seconds. Then I told it to optimize it, and now it's running at 1 fps. After going back and forth with the AI for hours, it never got faster than 1 fps. I guess I'm "doing it wrong" as the hypesters like to tell me.

Remove the "I actually only want a slideshow" instruction from your prompt :-)


speedrunning super mario world with neural nets is weirdly effective though. i guess you need a genetic algorithm to refine different approaches rather than a neural net.

Try converting the Javascript into a slide deck and spam the next button.

Didn’t Sp500 drag their feet for a long time before adding Tesla?

S&P500 held fast to their rules on consecutive quarters of profitability and forced TSLA to meet them (must be profitable in qX + sum to net profit over the past year). If they hold to them this time, SpaceX would need to be profitable over a year while public to enter the index.

They have instituted rules and gone back on them eventually (most notably for several years they had a "no going public with different classes of voting shares designed to allow control forever, if IPO is after today" rule that they eventually dropped) but they are generally pretty good about following rules.


It’s still faster to use AI to generate code while reading and guiding the code. Hell even long before LLms I would write python scripts to generate boilerplate code etc. LLM can be used similarly as a productivity boost in serious systems.

Is all our salt mining and run off making ocean saltier?

My initial reaction was fear.

But then I wondered if modern mining engineering is a solved problem? In that they mostly know how to make safe tunnels?

Then I looked up how deep Erie is and it’s pretty shallow, with an average depth of 62 ft!


Salt mines in particular are of the safest kind in the whole world, they are super stable. It's a self supporting rock with enough plasticity that the whole thing doesn't crumble down.

If you ever have privileged info of a huge earthquake happening, going into a salt mine is probably not the worst idea.

Plus it rehabilitates your lungs to be in a salt mine for a long time.


The only earthquake that happened in the region I am living during my lifetime was caused by a collapsing salt mine, though. (Small magnitude. I only heard about it because I was working at a particle accelerator lab at the time and the machine crew observed some beam instability caused by the ground vibrations, so they talked about it.)

> Plus it rehabilitates your lungs to be in a salt mine for a long time.

It what?


Like victorian doctors prescribed sea air for healing. When it didn't work they prescribed country air.

These treatments work best in conjunction with sunlight, which is unfortunately lacking in salt mines.

Not a terrible idea really: Victorian times were also when the industrial revolution was happening, and unregulated coal plants and factories were belching out unimaginable amounts of pollution into city air. Getting away from that mess and breathing clean air probably was good for you if you had health problems.

The joke is they send people someplace else, and when it doesn't work they send them back. Guessing most city dwellers could not afford a doctor or resting up on the countryside or beach.

Halotherapy / speleotherapy, pseudo science. Not harmful but probably just placebo

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halotherapy

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speleotherapy


The comparison I'd make is between a small section of an inactive salt mine with some people in it, and a "modern" city from a century or two ago.

The damp (salt is hydrophilic) walls of the mine could, over time, act as pretty effective passive filters for microscopic particles in the air.

Meanwhile, the city's air is just loaded with particles from all the coal/wood/etc. being burned as fuel.


I mean clean air is definitely good for you and a salt mine is probably cleaner than a city

I believe it's a disservice to science to say something doesn't work when there's not enough data yet. I know of a few cases of mines with many people swearing by them and the research I've read said "inconclusive, needs more research", not that "it doesn't work". There's meta studies available: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6435215/

There’s a reason the saying goes “back to the salt mines.” It’s just a generally pleasant place that people love to be in.

Indeed. There is an ancient saying "the children yearn for the mines". Why would this be a saying if it weren't good for them.

Salt mines are safe as long as you are careful to keep water and salt separated. If people operating a mine (or maintaining a closed one) are negligent or incompetent or under-invest into maintenance bad thinks can happen, especially in a wet climate - water will dissolve salt and not only in/around the mine itself but in underground salt layers connected to the mine which can span tens of kilometers away from the mine.

Salt mines are generally pretty stable because if they weren't stable they would be full of water and and not worth the effort to try and mine.

It could be a potential problem in some areas but salt domes are so numerous that nobody really bothers with less-than-ideal ones for mining.


Mermaid is awesome, since it has broad support, can be committed to repos, and can be created and edited very easily by LLMs.

Does it matter if it’s creative accounting? Uber is a great example of a company that everyone was certain would fail because it was unprofitable and now it succeeded and is profitable.

Uber didn't have ever-increasing costs though.

The tech is still young and projects take time. And there are many slow parts of building that have not been accelerated (mythical man month).

I have started making an indie game, as one does, and it’s easily going 2-4x speed, but even still I’d predict a year of free time development with focus to ‘finish’ this thing. But the latest agentic tech is 3 months old.


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