What We’re Reading: The 'Unstoppable' Development of a European Subway
See what stories caught our attention this week, including positive progress for mass transit in Serbia and a deposit return scheme that's making waves.RTBC Staff (Reasons to be Cheerful)
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Added a few variegated and other interesting succs to the collection - All For Gardening
1 & 2)Haworthia truncata Japanese hybrid variegatedGardener (All For Gardening)
VS dreigen met maatregelen tegen Rwanda om geweld in Oost-Congo
De Verenigde Staten zullen maatregelen tegen Rwanda nemen als het land zich niet aan de afspraken van het vredesakkoord voor Oost-Congo houdt. Dat heeft Marco Rubio, de Amerikaanse minister van Buitenlandse Zaken, zaterdag gezegd op X.Redactie redacteur (DPG Media)
I'm 57 and AI Just Made Me Unemployable (But Not For The Reason You Think)
It's not that AI is smarter than me. It's that companies finally have the excuse they've been looking for to not hire people like me at all.I use AI every single day. I think it's the future and I want to be part of it. I don't have the hate that most people carry. I am hopeful.
Claude helps me brainstorm. Perplexity helps me research better. I'm not some Boomer yelling at the cloud about technology ruining everything. I'm fluent in these tools. I'm faster now than I was at 30.
Gen X is not scared of technology. We are warriors. We adapt.
And I still can't get hired.
Not because AI replaced my job. Because AI gave companies permission to stop hiring people like me entirely. Sound like a conspiracy theory? It's not.
Let me explain.
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Lilith Saintcrow
Lili Saintcrow lives in Vancouver, Washington, with a library for wayward texts.Smashwords
The site that I previously went to for all this same information was christiansfortruth.com/ but it has been taken down for over a week.
A moscow court sentenced ICC figures including prosecutor Karim Khan in absentia to 3.5–15 years for “prosecuting innocent persons” and “preparing an attack” on putin.
The ICC had issued arrest warrants for putin over the deportation of Ukrainian children. russia called the ICC’s actions unlawful.
Russia issues prison sentences in absentia against ICC judges who ordered Vladimir Putin’s arrest
A judge of the Moscow City Court has handed down sentences — in absentia — against a range of figures from the International Criminal Court (ICC), the body that on March 17, 2023, announced an arrest warrant against Vladimir Putin.The Insider
Pierrette reshared this.
Birds of a feather:
>US threatens new ICC sanctions unless court pledges not to prosecute Donald Trump… President Donald Trump's administration wants the International Criminal Court to amend its founding document to ensure it does not investigate the American leader and his top officials, an administration official said, threatening new US sanctions on the court.<
thenationalnews.com/news/us/20…
US threatens new ICC sanctions unless court pledges not to prosecute Donald Trump
Sanctioning international court would significantly escalate US campaign against itReuters (The National)
And by that way, to Trump and it's "top officials" likewise.
It's time!
amzn.to/3JBti7u
📖🚀⚔️
This was a fun one, in an embrace the dark side kind of way.
#books #reading #ScienceFiction #SciFi #SpaceFantasy #StarWars
"A federal judge on Friday ordered the Justice Department to return data it seized in 2017 from a close friend of former FBI Director James Comey [...] and had improperly used the material to indict Comey.
The order is another blow to the Justice Department and prosecutors from the Eastern District of Virginia, after U.S. District Judge Cameron Currie ruled last month that former Trump attorney Lindsey Halligan was not lawfully appointed as interim U.S."
nbcnews.com/politics/justice-d…
Judge orders Justice Department to return data used to indict James Comey
A federal judge on Friday ordered the Justice Department to return data it seized in 2017 from a close friend of former FBI Director James Comey, concluding that the agency violated his constitutional rights.Michael Kosnar (NBC News)
Anyone here good with #docker #php #webDev?
I'm trying to get my code igniter app up on this Ubuntu box, which is using docker.
My php site expects a folder in /application/writable to write sessions files. This works on #nixos and on my live web server (not using docker)
Usually I just add that folder and 777 it for Dev and works. But for some reason, when running through docker, nothing can seem to write to that folder :(
This is my docker compose
github.com/mkellyxp/Docker-Lem…
GitHub - mkellyxp/Docker-Lemp: Docker/podman stuff for me
Docker/podman stuff for me. Contribute to mkellyxp/Docker-Lemp development by creating an account on GitHub.GitHub
My unusual event 😍 - All For Gardening
My dracaena has bloomed and I couldn't be happier. I honestly didn't know it bloomed; it has a fragrance that fills the whole room, it'sGardener (All For Gardening)
#silentSunday #Madeira 🍃
Gear:
• Sony α6400
• Sigma 16 mm f/1.4 DC DN | C
#art #fog #forest #landscape #landscapephotography #portugal #trees
Using E-Ink tablet as monitor for Linux - alavi.me
We will explore how we can use an Android E-ink tablet (or any tablet) as a monitor for Linux computeralavi.me
#SilentSunday – Rome style
CynnisBlogLink
The image features a person and a chocolate Labrador Retriever. The dog is positioned on the left side of the image, with its mouth open and tongue out, appearing happy and relaxed.Flickr
Pixy's Journey reshared this.

tomgrzybow
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •They don't want to hire older workers because we're "too expensive." They don't want to hire younger workers because they'd have to train them. They want people in their early 30s who already know everything, cost half what I do, and will work twice as hard without complaining.
This dynamic was already discernible by 2008 but has gotten progressively worse, to the point of absurdity now.
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Andrew Pam, Kenny Chaffin and Henrik Grubbström like this.
Kenny Chaffin
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •tomgrzybow likes this.
Coaster
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Freedium is not accessible to me (as we talked about before). Freedium.cfd seems to be blocked at the DNS level. I don't know how Tom or Kenny got to the article unless they went directly to the medium site and logged in.
I found a variation that does work, "https://freedium-mirror.cfd/" where you can go and manually paste in the medium article's URL. But I'm puzzled how your DNS gets through to the regular freedium site.
We talked about the freedium.cfd "server not found" problem on the post, "The Godfather Of AI Just Called Out The Entire AI Industry", but that post is on the diasporasocial server which has gone offline. (And actually yesterday I learned how to get to that post on glasswiings (or other servers) which was a major revelation itself.) But anyway, I'm not sure it's worth figuring out the DNS problem since it's only happened with freedium.cfd.
I think you might be getting through using a proxy server, but when i looked into that it seems to require subscribing or paying for a proxy service. Anyway, I'm curious as hell, but not sure it's worth more research.
Coaster
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Andrew Pam
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Andrew Pam
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •9.9.9.10
149.112.112.10
2620:fe::10
2620:fe::fe:10
Coaster
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Brad Koehn ☑️
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •So I can’t resolve it on my DNS (or Google, or Cloudflare), but when I resolve it manually I cannot negotiate a secure connection.
Coaster likes this.
tomgrzybow
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •here’s my resolv.conf, which gives me freedium-mirror.cfd/
search localhost
nameserver 66.70.189.77
nameserver 185.84.81.194
Breaking Medium paywall! - Freedium
freedium-mirror.cfdAndrew Pam likes this.
Greg A. Woods
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Back to the topic..... 🙃
I think if you use current LLM/GPT so-called "AI" every day you're loosing skills and intelligence every day -- at least that's what I've noticed in those that do.
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tomgrzybow and Henrik Grubbström like this.
tomgrzybow
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Greg A. Woods
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Henrik Grubbström likes this.
Brad Koehn ☑️
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •In my own experience using AI for engineering, it allows me to focus more on the differentiating parts of my app, and less on the stuff that, while important, is just table stakes.
For example, I use Stripe to process payments. It’s great, and obviously important, but it has a complex API (because it supports lots of ways to get paid) and what I need it for is quite cookie cutter. There’s tons of material written about how it works, and I could understand the important parts quickly, but could leave the LLM the tedious parts of the integration. Did I look it over carefully to make sure it did what it was supposed to do? Of course. Did I save a lot of time? Yes, I estimate it took about half the time compared to what I would have done in the past (I have several decades’ experience building software).
Over time I’ve gotten better at knowing what tasks I can let the LLM handle and what I cannot. I think of it as an enthusiastic intern, very fast but needing a fair bit of guidance. Still, overall I can build 10x to 20x faster most of the time. Mana
... show moreIn my own experience using AI for engineering, it allows me to focus more on the differentiating parts of my app, and less on the stuff that, while important, is just table stakes.
For example, I use Stripe to process payments. It’s great, and obviously important, but it has a complex API (because it supports lots of ways to get paid) and what I need it for is quite cookie cutter. There’s tons of material written about how it works, and I could understand the important parts quickly, but could leave the LLM the tedious parts of the integration. Did I look it over carefully to make sure it did what it was supposed to do? Of course. Did I save a lot of time? Yes, I estimate it took about half the time compared to what I would have done in the past (I have several decades’ experience building software).
Over time I’ve gotten better at knowing what tasks I can let the LLM handle and what I cannot. I think of it as an enthusiastic intern, very fast but needing a fair bit of guidance. Still, overall I can build 10x to 20x faster most of the time. Managing all the tedium just isn’t valuable; most of it simply needs to function.
Of course, there’s a tradeoff. Because I’m not building the deeper integrations, I’m not learning those as well as if I crafter them myself. But because I’m choosing to focus on the parts of my system that are differentiating, the parts that matter most get the most attention.
Coaster likes this.
Greg A. Woods
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •I must admit I've never seen any working code or patches from any LLM/GPT. Everything I have seen has been a total waste of time -- untested and unusable and complete slop. I just went through an episode on an issue where someone tried to use ChatGPT to analyze a macos crash dump where the stack trace was clear as day already. ChatGPT spewed out tons of unhelpful verbiage and then suggested a patch that it claimed fixed the problem, but unfortunately the patch would't even apply, let alone work. Someone else tried Grok on the same dump and it had even less useful suggestions. All the while they both spewed out miles of verbiage claiming confidently how helpful their suggestions were and offering even more analysis.
I don't doubt some folks have had some successes, but I think those are more up to chance than anything else.
The way LLM/GPT systems work, even with bolted-on so-called chain-of-thought "reasoning" enhancements, is totally and entirely devoid of any actual reasoning and hard logic. I find people who "believe" in LLM/GPT systems have a totally broken mindset
... show moreI must admit I've never seen any working code or patches from any LLM/GPT. Everything I have seen has been a total waste of time -- untested and unusable and complete slop. I just went through an episode on an issue where someone tried to use ChatGPT to analyze a macos crash dump where the stack trace was clear as day already. ChatGPT spewed out tons of unhelpful verbiage and then suggested a patch that it claimed fixed the problem, but unfortunately the patch would't even apply, let alone work. Someone else tried Grok on the same dump and it had even less useful suggestions. All the while they both spewed out miles of verbiage claiming confidently how helpful their suggestions were and offering even more analysis.
I don't doubt some folks have had some successes, but I think those are more up to chance than anything else.
The way LLM/GPT systems work, even with bolted-on so-called chain-of-thought "reasoning" enhancements, is totally and entirely devoid of any actual reasoning and hard logic. I find people who "believe" in LLM/GPT systems have a totally broken mindset in how they try to use them -- they command and argue with them as if they're talking to a human -- but they're talking to nothing better than a sack of potatoes! All they can do is respond to a series of input tokens in a way that their models suggest would be most likely, and often a tiny bit of randomness is thrown in to make sure they don't output the exact same thing to the same input every time. The so-called chain-of-thought systems just play off this randomness by feeding back the same input with the previous output a dozen times or so and then choose the most common output as their final output.
They are not search engines, and they don't store verbatim copies of the material that was used to train the model. Supposedly some can use search engines and other tools (e.g. actual mathematical processing systems) to give actually accurate output, but I haven't even seen that happen, even with Gemini enabled in google search. The actual search results are still better. Apple Siri did better a decade ago!
Coaster
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Brad Koehn ☑️
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Yeah, again they're not for everything, and like any tool you need to learn how to use it or you'll find yourself trying to use a hammer to drive a bolt. However, for the vast majority of what I do, having an LLM contribute to it helps me get it done much faster.
That said, I'm a highly-experienced engineer who's written and reviewed millions of lines of code, and I limit the things I will use the LLM for. Building a settings page? Great. Here's the model and the UI library and the standards I need it to follow, don't make any assumptions and I'll fill in whatever gaps it needs before it gets started. Then I'll review the code along the way, cleaning up mistakes and clarifying things. Finally I'll make certain the code is good and the tests pass.
Recently I had to build an API that could run on AWS, Azure, Google Cloud, and Kubernetes. I've worked with some of these to various degrees of proficiency, ranging from lots with k8s and AWS to not at all with Azure and Google Cloud. I had a common library that I had built that already did the work, but I needed that library
... show moreYeah, again they're not for everything, and like any tool you need to learn how to use it or you'll find yourself trying to use a hammer to drive a bolt. However, for the vast majority of what I do, having an LLM contribute to it helps me get it done much faster.
That said, I'm a highly-experienced engineer who's written and reviewed millions of lines of code, and I limit the things I will use the LLM for. Building a settings page? Great. Here's the model and the UI library and the standards I need it to follow, don't make any assumptions and I'll fill in whatever gaps it needs before it gets started. Then I'll review the code along the way, cleaning up mistakes and clarifying things. Finally I'll make certain the code is good and the tests pass.
Recently I had to build an API that could run on AWS, Azure, Google Cloud, and Kubernetes. I've worked with some of these to various degrees of proficiency, ranging from lots with k8s and AWS to not at all with Azure and Google Cloud. I had a common library that I had built that already did the work, but I needed that library to present an API in each environment (the way they work are significantly different). With an LLM I was able to build all four in about six hours, taking into account the different APIs they each use, different deployment schemes, etc., with documentation for sysadmins that was correctly written for each environment. Without the LLM it would have taken me a month, since I would have had to learn each environment from scratch, try to keep them all in my head, and build each piece. It's low-value work that can be easily automated.
LLMs don't "know" anything, but by design they find patterns much better than we can. And much (most?) software is a lot like other software, so there are often plenty of patterns to follow.
Again, it's not a panacea, it's a tool. But just as OSS libraries allowed us to build systems faster by leveraging the work of people who'd done it before, LLMs can generate code that can, in specific use cases, save a ton of time. And just as OSS components have vulnerabilities and weaknesses, LLM-generated code has its own problems.
It's astonishing to me how fast the tech has improved so far. In July, agentic development became a thing and it has made tremendous improvements to how you can interact with the LLM, giving it specs and requirements and it being able to tackle larger and larger tasks. It's still no where near as capable as an experienced engineer, and it makes mistakes, but it gets you 90+% of the way there out of the gate.
Coaster likes this.
Coaster
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Yes, that's the key factor, being motivated and knowledgeable about applying a tool. Over the years I'v observed that some people are good tool users and some have other approaches.
Greg A. Woods
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •How can you properly review the generated code if you don't already know the API it's using???
Are there no boilerplate examples in the wild to draw upon without having to rely on an LLM to express the pattern you are looking for?
Brad Koehn ☑️
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Exactly the way you would handle any code review.
Yes, there are tons. That's how it LLMs work. Better to ask: why, if I'm in the automation business, should anyone pay me to do manually what can be done with automation?
tomgrzybow
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Greg A. Woods
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Actually no that's not quite how LLMs work -- they effectively produce an "average" of their inputs, something that may not be very good when you're expecting working and valid code.
Gemini might actually be better at using an external searches engine (it's google, after all), I don't know, but if you don't get a valid URL from it and then use that URL to go find the code you want, then it's just pouring out average slop like all the other LLM/GPTs.
tomgrzybow
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Greg A. Woods
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Unless I'm trying to write fiction, I just can't get why anyone would even bother to use any LLM/GPT. It's dead-end technology that basically only demonstrates that a deep learning model can capture the essence of human language, and the GPT part is a cheap trick to show just how complete the model is.
It means other uses of deep learning may indeed have real value, e.g. double-checking radiologists on reading CT scans. Those kinds of uses where there is an engineered adversarial relationship between the deep learning model and its tooling vs. the practitioner who who has to do the same work anyway, show real promise, but as search engines and coding tools they're way too sloppy and just waste time, either now or later when you find out they screwed up. These tools should check your work, not do it for you.
If I can explain something well enough to prompt an LLM/GPT to give me something, then I'm pretty sure I can write what I need without its help and be sure that I understand what I wrote completely (or as completely as is possible while I hold the bigger picture in
... show moreUnless I'm trying to write fiction, I just can't get why anyone would even bother to use any LLM/GPT. It's dead-end technology that basically only demonstrates that a deep learning model can capture the essence of human language, and the GPT part is a cheap trick to show just how complete the model is.
It means other uses of deep learning may indeed have real value, e.g. double-checking radiologists on reading CT scans. Those kinds of uses where there is an engineered adversarial relationship between the deep learning model and its tooling vs. the practitioner who who has to do the same work anyway, show real promise, but as search engines and coding tools they're way too sloppy and just waste time, either now or later when you find out they screwed up. These tools should check your work, not do it for you.
If I can explain something well enough to prompt an LLM/GPT to give me something, then I'm pretty sure I can write what I need without its help and be sure that I understand what I wrote completely (or as completely as is possible while I hold the bigger picture in my head).
Why not mentor/train a real human junior and get them to do the real grunt work and learn by doing instead of trying to explain your needs to an LLM/GPT?
Henrik Grubbström likes this.
Coaster
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Just for jollies I had an LLM bot write some html and javascript to create a web page to display photos. I haven't coded in decades. This simple example seems to work pretty well. Way too simple so far, but hey it's pretty impressive anyway you look at it.
poe.com/s/DQoXpRv68zCdX1d3aRn9
create html with inline styles to display 10 photos
poe.comCoaster
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Cherny, the engineer behind Anthropic's Claude Code:
businessinsider.com/claude-cod…
Why Claude Code's creator says vibe coding has limits
Lee Chong Ming (Business Insider)Coaster
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •Just for the record, I'll note the 3 short lines of text I entered which got the bot to produce code well beyond my skill level, "responsive design stuff and all.
Note the bot didn't skip a beat and correctly filled in where i missed typing in the word "character". I didn't continue to integrate and test the javascript, but I expect it will work.
There's a lot of detail work and a huge memory load being a programmer. So, for all the faults of LLM's it is easy to see some eye popping productivity gains, at least every once in a while.
tomgrzybow likes this.
Coaster
in reply to Andrew Pam • • •