@WarrenInTheBuff So the lower half is more sensitive, max 220f, but the upper half can go to 900f, and they advertise it for deep frying. Had 0 issues handling a smoked ribeye.
@valigo@SpolchenDev Language the important factor here. Not all dynamic languages suffer from this issue, but it depends on how the interpreter handles it.
Python is also just... way too dynamic.
@ibuildthecloud It's like a more braindead version of Evaluator-Optimizer. Claude's website has had it since the end of 2024... https://t.co/p73LHr62ct
The words "it's possible" and "enterprise-level" are doing some heavy lifting here.
Yes, it could meet enterprise standards. Yes, it is possible.
The moment you actually run it at the scale of a real enterprise, that is no longer $5 a year.
This dude doesn't seem to understand that it's possible to set up an enterprise-level infrastructure orchestrator failover/failback system for less than $5/year using a serverless function cronjob for the health check and pub/sub.
Note, based on the data https://t.co/TGARbjeRwj "the young people" referred to are typically older than 25.
Very important for 1/3 of this website (Also based on data https://t.co/dB6EgRrrIT)
If you track down the Zillow listing this is still 3k over the Zestimate, overpriced!
Hot take:
I see a lot of young people say housing isn’t affordable in America.
But if you moved from your urban city with Pilates and $20 avocado toast, it probably would be.
So what’s really stopping you?
Boomers relocated. I relocated in 2016. Why can’t you?
If you truly think that AI is reducing the cost of building software, then you should be aggressively investing into every part of the User Experience. It's really that simple.
There is honestly no reason for this to be the case. The onboarding flow is easy.
1. Configure inference Provider.
2. Ask the user how they expect to use the agent.
3. With user consent to use the provider, populate the skills based on that.
4. Presets for non-interactive flows.
Hermes Agent comes with a truly absurd number of skills pre-enabled. Over 100 of them. This is roughly half.
I get what they're going for - they want an agent that comes "ready out of the box".
I just don't get why every user has to have a polymarket skill, 3 baoyu art skills (? never heard of this), a headless Pokemon skill, and Minecraft modpack server skills, all available the first time they run it.
I guess Hermes Agent just isn't for me.
Hey if you want to look at what @ThePrimeagen has built, feel free to look up how Netflix TV has evolved.
Or https://t.co/BhWa3rUzi7
But I guess if you (@alightinastorm) need to post bad takes to pay your bills, continue as is.
i'm really living rent free in primeagen's head
he posted another video, now it's "really dumb tweets"
bych don't kll my vibe, get yourself some sunglasses and build something other than vim plugins
@1ovthafew@version Makes sense. Didn't know if that interaction was built-in or if this was a moment where Temporal and Version sound similar, but are targeting different issues.
Thanks for the response!