Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | tshannon's commentslogin

I live in MN and have a Lightning. The range does drop significantly in the winter compared to the summer, however no other vehicle I've ever owned has been able to pre-heat my cabin in my garage every morning before my commute to work, and I'm not driving 500 miles to work so it seems like a worthwhile trade off to me.


So probably another stupid question, but how do you know what it's spitting out is accurate?


One has to be aware of the possibility of hallucinations, of course. But I have not encountered any hallucinations in these sorts of interactions with the current leading models. Questions like "what does 'embedding space' mean in the abstract of this paper?" yield answers that, in my experience, make sense in the context and check out when compared with other sources. I would be more cautious if I were using smaller models or if I were asking questions about obscure information without supporting context.

Also, most of my questions are not about specific facts but about higher-level concepts. For ML-related topics, at least, the responses check out.


Planka is awesome, too bad it's no longer Open Source.


Exactly. As inflation goes up and wages remain stagnant, more and more people are doing the risk calculus that makes stealing and crime in general worthwhile.

People with good paying jobs that don't wear them down the bone don't steal things, but when you're looking at spending 90% of your pay on a shared living space, and no money left for food, or emergencies, then stealing copper, or catalytic converters all of a sudden starts looking like a valid option.


Is there a reference for this claim? "Only downside is that RNAi (and mRNA) are uncorrectable once introduced."



Still not seeing that claim, I'm still reading though, but so far it seems to actually claim the opposite. Some of the failings of MRNAI is that it's temporary.


Isn't the real goal negative emissions? We're well past safe levels of CO2 in the atmosphere.


Unrelated, but does anyone have any good options for listening to a podcast with someone simultaneously? I know in spotify you can do shared listening sessions, but that requires a spotify premium subscription.

Any good self hosted podcast streaming options, or other options that allow shared listening?


Godot has some pretty good navigation, and it was recently re-written in GD 4.1: https://docs.godotengine.org/en/stable/tutorials/navigation/...

As for Android, I know they are still tackling C# support on Android exports, but other than that I'm not personally aware of it not being good for mobile.


This is one of the reasons why investing in learning a terminal "IDE" / editor like vim / emacs can pay off. You can ssh from anywhere and have your development environment waiting for you.


I never know if it's better to link to the webpage or the repository.

Source and more details are here: https://github.com/timshannon/threenamesinahat/


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: