And also (an incompetent and lazy) lawyer’s worst nightmare.
At least once a week, there is another US court case where the judge absolutely rips apart an attorney for AI-generated briefs and statements featuring made-up citations and nonexistent cases. I am not even following the topic closely, and yet I just encounter at least once a week.
Here are a couple most recent ones I spotted: Mezu v. Mezu (oct 29)[0], USA v. Glennie Antonio McGee (oct 10)[1].
> There are so many base features that are inexplicably relegated to 3rd party apps.
> Like a better finder experience.
> Or keeping screen on.
Do you mind linking or naming which tools you use for those 2 purposes?
Asking out of pure curiosity, as for keeping the screen on, I just use `caffeinate -imdsu` in the terminal. Previously used Amphetamine, but I ended up having some minor issues with it, and I didn't need any of its advanced features (which could definitely be useful to some people, I admit, just not me). I just wanted to have a simple toggle for "keep the device and/or display from sleeping" mode, so I just switched to `caffeinate -imdsu` (which is built-in).
As for Finder, I didn't really feel the need for anything different, but I would gladly try out and potentially switch to something better, if you are willing to recommend your alternative.
I use the Finder and Raycast heavily. Raycast is not, and does not sell itself as, a Finder equivalent.
OP: I've tried all the Finder replacements. Path Finder, for example. At the end of the day, I went back to Finder. I always have a single window on screen with the tabs that I use all day. This helps enormously. I show it on YouTube here (direct timestamp link): https://youtu.be/BzJ8j0Q_Ed4?si=VVMD54EJ-XsxkYzm&t=338
> If you are happy to work for a for-profit corporation w/o any financial compensation then you are more than welcome to do that. Seems a bit irrational to me but that's just my opinion.
Not the person you are replying to, and it is a bit tangential, but you just basically described a solid chunk of open-source software work.
I am not mocking open-source software work, I am mocking how reductionist the parent comment was, because their logic often applies to volunteer open-source software work as well. And, I suspect, on HN we can agree that volunteer open-source software work can often be worth doing, regardless of how "irrational" it is or how much for-profit corporations could benefit from it.
I don't think this is an accurate comparison. Working on open source software means you are contributing to that software, which yes may be used by for profit companies. This is more analogous to contributing to Wikipedia, which is then used by for profit companies like Grok, than it is contributing to Grok products directly, which cannot be leveraged by other tools in this ecosystem (afaik).
> Just had to poke the touchpad every so often so it didn't go to sleep
Unwarranted tip: next time, if you use macOS, just open the terminal and run `caffeinate -imdsu`.
I assume Linux/Windows have something similar built-in (and if not built-in, something that's easily available). For Windows, I know that PowerToys suite of nifty tools (officially provided by Microsoft) has Awake util, but that's just one of many similar options.
Unless they willingly and provingly try to grift IRS on a continuous basis, no, people don't get in trouble for this.
If you mess something up or underpay on your taxes, and if (or when) IRS detects it, they will send you a letter explaining their concerns and provide you with remediation options (as well as an opportunity to dispute, of course). The remediation options provided by IRS typically include both "pay it now and we will go away as if it never happened" and "talk to us, and we can work out a payment plan with you (in case you aren't able to cover at the moment)".
So no, IRS isn't some boogeyman that is gonna get you in trouble over a mistake. If they catch a mistake, they will work with you to remediate it, and their terms are typically extremely reasonable, and have zero negative consequences for utilizing them (unless you are, beyond any reasonable doubt, trying to defraud them or refuse to cooperate entirely).
Eh the problem is when they dont catch mistakes for several years, and then come after you for like 80 grand at once, and then when you cant pay it threaten to seize your assets
Your parents must have defaulted on the plan, not filed taxes or otherwise broken a rule. Because once a plan is set up, the IRS is forbidden from seizing assets unless something rare like the previous happens.
The difference is that NFT always seemed to be just hype for hype’s sake, with zero functional/helpful use-case at all. No, “trading cards [more like hashes/serial numbers receipts of those tbh], but digital” is not a functional use-case.
And afaik, that was the only use of NFTs that actually worked. The whole “omg you can buy skin in this one game as an nft, and then have it across multiple games” (as well as other bs of a similar nature) was always a ridiculous thing, as it still requires gamedevs to collab and actually do all the required integration work (which is rather infeasible). And even if they decided to ever do that, they would almost certainly find it much easier to accomplish without relying on NFT tech.
AI also has a ton of hype and pipedreams that are vaporware, of course (just look at all the batches of chatgpt wrapper startups in thr past couple of years). However, what the AI hype has (that NFT never did) is a number of actual functional use-cases, and people utilize it heavily for actual work/productivity/daily help with great success.
Claud Code/Gemini CLI alone can be such a boon in the hands of a good software engineer, it is undeniable.
Transcription, translation, material/product defect detection, weather forecasting/early warning systems, OCR, spam filtering, protein folding, tumor segmentation, drug discovery/interaction prediction, etc. seem fairly promising to me, with machine learning approaches often blowing traditional approaches out of the water.
I feel the idea that there's only "one thing it's supposed to be good at (writing code)" is largely down to availability bias, in that we're in programming circles where LLM code completion gets talked about a lot. ChatGPT reportedly has 700 million weekly users - I'd assume many using it for tasks that I'm not even aware of (automating some tedious/repetitive part of their job).
> It sucks at the one thing it's supposed to be good at (writing code).
It sucks at replacing software engineers. So yes, if you expect it to design a complex scalable system and implement it for you from start to finish, then sure, you can call it bad at "writing code".
I don't care about that use-case. I think I am decently good at writing code, and I rather enjoy doing it. I find Claude Code/Gemini CLI extremely helpful at both saving me lots of time by freeing me from dealing with annoying boilerplate, so I can focus more on actual system design (which LLMs fail at terribly, if we are talking about real production apps that need to scale) and more difficult/fun parts of code (which LLMs cannot handle either).
That's the real power of it, multiplying the productive output of good SWEs + making the work feel more enjoyable for them, by letting those SWEs focus on actual tricky/difficult parts, instead of forcing them to spend a good half of the time just dealing with boilerplate.
And I am not even gonna bother getting into tons of other non-coding tasks it is already very useful of. I find it amazing that I can now not only get a transcript of my work meetings (which is already massively helpful for me to review later, as opposed to listening to a ~25min video recording of it), but also ask an LLM to summarize it for me or parse/extract info from it.
After tons of internal crisises, mismanagement, and consecutive revenue losses, Radioshack got delisted from exchanges and eventually filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2015.
After that, Radioshack got acquired, got mismanaged again, the parent company went broke, and Radioshack filed for bankruptcy again in 2017.
By the time Tai Lopez got his hands on it (late 2020), there was pretty much nothing of value left there, except the brand (and even the brand was a questionable value proposition at that point tbh).
No, it is still fraud, even if your fraudelent actions ended up making the investors/company money. And it will land you in prison.
This is exactly what Martin Shkreli spent his time in prison for (and not for anything related to Daraprim drug price increases, despite what some people apparently believe, as I discovered).
TLDR (with a great deal of oversimplification): he ran a hedge fund (MSMB) and was lying to investors about how much money the fund had and about the investment strategies. He then started a pharma company called Retrophin and used some of his equity in Retrophin to compensate the MSMB investors for their losses (without their knowledge, i.e., basically the exact same issue with lying about investment strategies to investors he had earlier). It just so happened that Retrophin ended up performing fairly well at the time, and that equity actually ended up making profit for those investors overall.
Investors/company making money in the end is not a valid defense against fraud charges. If a hedge fund manager or a CEO cashes out the investor/company accounts in secret, goes to Vegas to place it all on red, makes a gain, and then puts it back into the investor/company account, it is still a crime. Despite the fact that the investors/company made money in the end, I don’t think it is wrong to call this a fraudelent move.
However, the wheels of justice tend to be slow, and it might take some time for the consequences to catch up. Those fraudelent actions on Shkreli’s part were taken around 2012-2013, the investigation was opened in 2015, and he got convicted in 2017.
At least once a week, there is another US court case where the judge absolutely rips apart an attorney for AI-generated briefs and statements featuring made-up citations and nonexistent cases. I am not even following the topic closely, and yet I just encounter at least once a week.
Here are a couple most recent ones I spotted: Mezu v. Mezu (oct 29)[0], USA v. Glennie Antonio McGee (oct 10)[1].
0. https://acrobat.adobe.com/id/urn:aaid:sc:US:a948060e-23ed-41...
1. https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.alsd.74...
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