Yann LeCun says LLMs are strongest in domains where language itself is the substrate of reasoning, like math and code
They can solve problems, prove theorems, and write programs — but they are not creative mathematicians, software architects, or computer scientists
"their role is to help humans build"
.@PalmerLuckey’s advice for young founders:
“If you want to work on technology, work for somebody else. If you want to work on nonstop bullshit—start a company.”
“It became clear there were people much better than me at certain things.”
“I had to stop doing the things I liked, and start doing things I was uniquely able to do— running the company, doing fundraising.”
@latkins@PrimeIntellect Can confirm. I am now amped and like the way it feels.
Well played @PrimeIntellect who is your marketing mastermind behind this?
The best judge for your LLM application is your user.
The LLM that judges your LLM application must have its judgement judged (even if only downstream) by a human user.
Abstraction does not remove the need for contact with reality and survival over time.
#unautomatable
(Agile?) Context Engineering for Agents & Multi-Agent Systems, with @llm_wizard, by @AIMakerspace & @MavenHQ
https://t.co/xTDwYtCdCP
Big Takeaways 👇
Foundational Context Engineering references with big main ideas behind each👇
- (March 30, 2025) 12-Factor Agents
Repo: https://t.co/mEETG7YW3r
Talk: https://t.co/6fZwv2jCzo
💡Big idea: own your context window and treat it like prime real estate; minimize “context utilization”