Published a new blog post and a small library for measuring .NET code performance with cycles precision and analysing results with a new HDR histogram implementation. #dotnet#csharp https://t.co/NKfYKUB7V3
@Aaronontheweb I think it's because we have a strong runtime and any package dont need to rely on 32 other dependencies.
In a .NET shop, when you introduce a dependency you can make the due dilligence of checking who you are depending on.
That's not really possible in the JS world.
@Aaronontheweb Yes, I believe the future will be more and more toward architecturing project correctly so you can delegate more, safely to the agents.
ie: improving permissions systems & resilience to safely deploy apps vibe coded by other trades.
@Aaronontheweb I had great success writing a parquet library.
I made a solid API surface, E2E tests using others implementations, then delegated the implementation & optimisation to codex.
Now it's the fastest .NET Parquet lib (still need finish it and publish it).
@xoofx Oh yes, I'm excluding training here.
If you look at things like this:
https://t.co/kCv6h2g1YK
You can see that the inference cost for a model of 0.5T model is about 1$.
@xoofx I think the reason of rising the costs of tokens is an offer issue, they have too much customer wanting tokens, so they can only rise price to reduce demand.
@xoofx > Personal Plus/Pro plans are subsidized.
I dont think they are! It's more that there is massive margins on inference !
If you do napkin calculation to guess how much a token cost them, and take the worst (reasonable) estimation, they still turn out profitable !
@xoofx Oh the dispose is never triggering simply because I kill the program.
It's a vibe coded TUI on top of my trace converter, codex & claude have some issues with managing the lifecycles...
@vundqvistliktor@rfleury@awesomekling Yes, the patch in question was sent by a human, wasnt co-signed by copilot, and was reviewed by multiple other humans.
@doingjustttfine@rfleury@awesomekling Well if you've read the article I sent, you would have see that it's not exactly an advertisement, but an engineering article.
It's about the dotnet platform, and there isn't a noticable quality drop in .NET.
@rfleury@awesomekling Sorry, I was following you for a while, but after seeing this (you didn't even read the article before asking if it was a joke) and your recent replies history, I don't think you are a good SWE account to follow anymore.
It was my mistake to interact here, goodbye.