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


Unless you work for Enron, where the retirement fund went down with the company.

I'm interested in a trailer, but the space they take up while not being used (which is most of the time) is a big negative.

There are some pretty slick folding trailers out there. They save a little bit of space

Dell is doing very well on Server sales if I recall correctly. Should offset any PC sales slump.

Not on Intel consumer CPUs.

Interesting that [1] is 30% zig as well as mostly typescript. That's a lot of native code for something that runs in a terminal (i.e. no graphical code required).

The failure mode of returning code that only appears to work correctly is one I've encountered before. I've had Sonnet (4 I think) generate a bunch of functions that check if parameter values are out of valid range and just return without error when they should be a failing assertion. That kind of thing does smell of training data that hasn't been checked for correctness by experienced coders.

Edit: Changed 3.5 to 4.

Edit: Looking back to edits and checkins by AI agents, it strikes me that the checkins should contain the prompt used and model version. More recent Aider versions do add the model.


> Rails is (loosely) a rewrite of what was originally written in C [with extensions].

Are you talking about WebObjects, which was written in Objective-C? (1) If so your comment is somewhat tangential to the truth.

(1 2104) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8765009


Also this is the model name: Qwen3-30B-A3B-Instruct-2507

I tried the q4 quantization when it came out and didn't find it to be great for my coding use case.



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

Search: