Loving the new producers out at the moment, but realizing the sound has been around for a while and continues to evolve. 'Contemporary' Future Music: https://t.co/1Ie3eUtavq
Israel has never been an ally of the USA, they use the USA when they need to.
The USS Liberty was a U.S. Navy signals-intelligence ship that was in the eastern Mediterranean during the Six-Day War, officially to monitor regional communications. On June 8, 1967, Israeli aircraft and then torpedo boats attacked it, killing 34 American sailors and wounding 171.
I'm actually getting tired of this shit. Someone get these open source software nerds on the phone and tell them ... I don't know. I've lost track of which supply chain attack were caused by what, there's been too many.
Someone just fucking do something, oh my lord
All these fucking dorks at Anthropic do is yap about how insane their product is and how end-of-the-world it will be
Someone tell these jabronis to shut the fuck up, holy Christ they're so annoying
Samsung just averted a strike by granting chip workers an average bonus of about $340,000.
The union made a credible strike threat that would have threatened the global chip supply, and Samsung, predicted to be the 2nd most profitable company on Earth this year, caved to worker demands.
Samsung has about 78,000 people in its semiconductor division, and while bonuses will vary the average comes out to a stunning $340,000 per worker.
I strongly believe there are entire companies right now under heavy AI psychosis and its impossible to have rational conversations about it with them. I can't name any specific people because they include personal friends I deeply respect, but I worry about how this plays out.
I lived through the great MTBF vs MTTR (mean-time-between-failure vs. mean-time-to-recovery) reckoning of infrastructure during the transition to cloud and cloud automation. All those arguments are rearing their ugly heads again but now its... the whole software development industry (maybe the whole world, really).
It's frightening, because the psychosis folks operate under an almost absolute "MTTR is all you need" mentality: "its fine to ship bugs because the agents will fix them so quickly and at a scale humans can't do!" We learned in infrastructure that MTTR is great but you can't yeet resilient systems entirely.
The main issue is I don't even know how to bring this up to people I know personally, because bringing this topic up leads to immediately dismissals like "no no, it has full test coverage" or "bug reports are going down" or something, which just don't paint the whole picture.
We already learned this lesson once in infrastructure: you can automate yourself into a very resilient catastrophe machine. Systems can appear healthy by local metrics while globally becoming incomprehensible. Bug reports can go down while latent risk explodes. Test coverage can rise while semantic understanding falls. Changes happens so fast that nobody notices the underlying architecture decaying.
I worry.