This is indeed two sides of the same coin. A good reminder that you need to pick the right approach depending on the context.
Interesting point of view. I'm not sure I fully agree with the classification but it gives something to mull over. For sure the less reliable your estimates the more padding is needed to have some predictability.
Rituals are definitely important... if you understand why you're going though them. If you just "go through the moves" they're failing.
This explains quite well how TDD is made of several cycles of different length.
This is a funny setup. It's not very expensive either.
Seriously... Developers should be ashamed to produce such invasive tools.
I find the title misleading. Still, this is a good exploration of how to treat unwrap() and expect() in Rust code.
Unicode in source code can come with unwanted consequences. Tooling might be required.
Feels a bit like bad coordination on the Tor project side this one.
This is one of the perks of a strong type system. You can ensure that you don't mess up your units.
It is indeed in a weird state on Linux to say the least. Make sure to follow the links there, they lead to more precise resources.
Or why estimates need to happen in one way or another.
There are indeed cases where you don't want to hurt your reputation...
Good summary of the different possible options around remote work.
Yes... definitely is too complex. This standard seriously needs a pass of simplification, I'm not at all convinced profiles would be enough to help for cases like this.
Looks like the writing is on the wall indeed... The paradox is that an important training corpus for LLMs will disappear if it dies for good. Will we see output quality lower? Or ossification of knowledge instead?
A short collection of links (some already seen somewhere else in the review) which altogether draw a stark picture of the LLM industry.
Unsurprisingly it works OK when it's about finding syntax errors you made or about low stakes mechanical work you need to repeat. The leash has to be very short.
Such contributions still don't exist. Or their quality is so abyssal that they waste everyone's time. Don't fall for the marketing speak.
Nice new tool from the Tor project. Looks like it'll make it really easy to push traffic to Tor from the command line.