So wouldn’t the fees be proportional to the price? The added taxes on a tiny cheap holiday home would be cheap too.
So wouldn’t the fees be proportional to the price? The added taxes on a tiny cheap holiday home would be cheap too.
It explains the answer is 4 before the 5 minute mark.
Part of the reason is because it goes into the story of the SAT being wrong and a student being the one to catch it, which I found interesting.
After that it mathematically proves it several different ways and then shows how it relates to some real problems in astronomy.
Can you elaborate on what happened when you tried to search? I’ve never had trouble.
I’m talking about using the ChatGPT API to make a chat bot. Even when the user’s input is just one sentence, it can cause ChatGPT to forget its prompt.
Is it possible to be a productive programmer with slow typing speed? Yes. I have met some.
But…can fast typing speed be an advantage for most people? Yes!
Like you said, once you come up with an idea it can be a huge advantage to be able to type out that idea quickly to try it out before your mind wanders.
But also, I use typing for so many others things: writing Slack messages and emails. Writing responses to bug tickets. Writing new tickets. Documentation. Search queries.
The faster I type, the faster I can do those things. Also, the more I’m incentivized to do it. It’s no big deal to file a big report for something I discovered along the way because I can type it up in 30 seconds. Someone else who’s slow at typing might not bother because it’d take too long.
GPT-3.5 seems to have a problem of recency bias. With long enough input it can forget its prompt or be convinced by new arguments.
GPT-4 is not immune though better.
I’ve had some luck with a post-prompt. Put the user’s input, then follow up with a final sentence reminding the model of the prompt and desired output format.
OK, let’s say you’ve got a bunch of regexes in a source repository that need to get modified frequently. It can be difficult to code-review complex regexes, and even harder to code-review changes to an existing regex.
Something like this might actually help. A change to a complex regex might actually produce a more clear diff of a subset of lines.
Also, I think being able to comment in the middle of a regex would be super handy for that type of code.
Unfortunately I’ve never tasted anything with Stevia that I like. Weird, weird aftertaste.
Aspartame has an aftertaste but I got used to it after maybe three tries. I’ve never gotten used to Stevia.
Too bad, because in other ways Stevia is superior.
I like fizzy drinks, so lately I’ve been mostly drinking unsweetened, like La Croix or Spindrift.
This should be required reading for anyone who thinks that frontend is easy.
Also, if anyone thinks this is a limitation of the web, I’d challenge you to try to create an app that displays 18,000 lines of syntax-highlighted, findable text using another popular toolkit like .NET, Qt, or Cocoa. They’ll all get bogged down if you try to naively put all of that content in a single view and expect built-in scrolling and find features to just work, quickly. Pretty much the only way to make something like that work involves a lot of tricks behind the scenes, no matter what platform.
I’m really happy they landed on a solution that not only delivers high performance, but supports the browser’s native Find function and accessibility. I think some people could have anticipated those problems, but far more important is that they listened to user feedback and pivoted when their first idea didn’t make users happy.
I think there are different aspects to it.
Amazon’s delivery service is better than ever. You get products in half the time, with less packaging, and fewer miles traveled to deliver it to you, without any significant increase in delivery fees.
Price is still competitive when you take into account delivery cost and speed. If you don’t care about those, Amazon isn’t the cheapest.
Search and reviews are down the tubes. It’s like Amazon no longer cares if their site is overrun with crap products as long as people are buying them.
Amazon still works great if you only buy name-brand products that are fulfilled by Amazon.