@robj3d3 It's pitiful actually. We're supposed to trust those people with the most powerful piece of technology ever created when they can't even work together and just bash each other online?
That’s just sad. I actually graduated from Mechatronics, although after first few months I wanted to switch to CS. Unfortunately the dean had a rough day and didn’t even want to help me (I had more than good enough scores to go there, I think I actually annoyed him when he asked me for my math score and I said 98% :D ). Anyway, I stayed, learnt a bit of mechanics and electronics and learnt CS on the side myself.
Honestly, I just hope that it’s not the end of this job as a whole, I don’t care much about language of framework, I started learning C++ as a kid, then used Java in my first job, and then various TS, python and other kind of adventures. But if we get automated as a whole industry - I’m gonna be sad
This is very well said. What we actually have done is we basically threw money (RAM) on coding problems. People saying that games in 2000s used to look good and work on, what would be today considered as, laughable specs. Yes, because they were optimised. Because people put effort into thinking about the problems and solving them as close to hardware as possible. And now we need 200-500mbs just to run numpy. Which is funny considering the prices of hardware right now.
@BenjaminDEKR I haven't seen people I follow unless I literally go to that tab.
My "For you" is full of people asking to connect and drop my SaaS and all kinds of nonsense.
And guess what, those posts have best stats :D
Szybko, szybciej, najszybciej.
A teraz wyobraźcie sobie, że pracujecie w firmie, decydujecie się potestować w teamie nowego Groka, i wszystkie Wasze sekrety poleciały właśnie do chmury.
Standardy w szerokim techu jakby co raz gorsze.
We care deeply about your privacy and respect customer choice. For teams using zero data retention, no trace and code data is ever retained. All API key use of Grok Build also respects ZDR.
If ZDR is disabled, the /privacy command is available in the CLI to disable data retention, which also deletes previously synced data.
Run the /privacy command to view or change your settings at any time.
@yagiznizipli@X Quite interesting. At the same time, X app on ios becomes a performance hell the moment I start talking with grok for more than 3 messages. Worth looking into that