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the best async story is probably Ruby with Fibers.

you skip the function coloring.

Virtual threads in JVM are similar.


wow!! straight to the dome.

thought about this too - but not as expressively as you put it.

e.g in China - for early stage ventures - there's cut throat competition - then as Thiel would put it with heavy competition profits trend towards 0 - by then the tech is perfected or close to perfect - then the state uses its funds to back a monopoly. that's how you get a BYD.


I sometimes forget ford used to make cars more than trucks.

the prices in that article shows the diners were cheap enough for a working man to eat daily there - a 10c dinner in 1940 - would be $2.38 today.

you can't find a hot meal for $2.30 anywhere in the states or Western Europe today.


well said.

a lot of these NGO people have done so much damage to vulnerable African populations.

a lot of rural African homesteads are usually spaced out - made out of sustainable materials - reed & thatch for roofing, then earth brick - which is cooling.

the latrines are always at least 30m from the sleeping quarters. but of course - some NGOs will come telling the local people that you've been doing it all wrong.


    > the latrines are always at least 30m from the sleeping quarters
Toilet facilities are lacking in many parts of the world, and "open defecation" – e.g. toileting in a field without the benefit of a dedicated hole / long-drop / pit – is still in use.

The study did show positive health outcomes with the new housing over a traditional mud + thatch dwelling.

Given that the new housing incorporated dedicated latrines, harvesting of clean water, and insect-exclusion techniques, it's unsurprising that the new housing outperformed traditional dwellings in health outcomes.

It didn't do a cost-benefit analysis comparing an equivalent investment in e.g. provision of latrines, insect-netting, clean water, or simply providing cash to the participants.


my take is Anthropic needs a large cash infusion since it's the one of the popular model providers.

if it runs of out of cash - then it's bad for the whole industry.

same as OpenAI. so all players - will provide cash & compute to keep them going.


> if it runs of out of cash - then it's bad for the whole industry.

Why? I don’t think we would suffer if anthropic disappeared tomorrow


Google, Microsoft, Oracle, Meta, Nvidia. All their stock gains in the last 2 or so years were because of the AI hype. And who knows how much money the borrowed and promises they made on the assumption that their stock will continue to rise in the same pace for years to come. When one domino falls, they will follow. So they have every incentive to keep the music going for one of their "friends".

If Anthropic disappeared tomorrow due to running out of cash it would cause a great panic, no?

For who? A bunch of financiers that gamble with pension funds? The real panic is when they IPO and force 401Ks to buy into it.

You're so naive. It's all a big game of domino.

They need compute

I wonder if the author looked at Civil Engineers and put himself in their shoes.

This is like a Civil Engineer looking at the highways & bridges and saying - yeah no more work for me.

'Engineering' will always be a career - specially in a bit driven world. Just cause LLMs can spit words doesn't mean the LLMs are doing engineering.


Jensen Huang said this in his recent interview - that China has the best/most engineers, it has the chip making ability, it's a good thing they wanna build on a Nvidia stack - but if you push them they will build on an all Chinese stack - but the interviewer was being a numb head who kept parroting the propaganda of Western tech supremacy

They would have moved to their own stack regardless. They've got the people and resources for it, and they've witnessed the fallout of globalization and experienced dependency on semi-hostile political powers enough to know that it's the smart move.

It's also more or less the same move that they've been using pretty much since the WTO entry: take on foreign manufacturing, copy the products, sell knockoffs as their own, build new products on top of the that knowledge.


Referring to the Dwarkesh interview clearly.

Jensen came across as incredibly defensive and intentionally close-minded, shows that even billionaires suffer from "a man can't understand something if his paycheck depends on him not understanding it."

Your assertion is silly: did Tesla selling electric cars into China stop them from delivering their own industry? They were going to develop their domestic industry regardless.

We simply don't know the counterfactual, if they had unlimited access to Nvidia chips, how far ahead would their models be?


I thought Jensen’s comparison to Huawei’s cell phone hardware infra (towers and networking) to be an interesting comparison- that shutting them out of a market was one of the causes of their current position in the market. It made them more dominant in the end.

No counterfactual there either though.

"close-minded" are the stupid people that unironically believe in the EA crap

> but if you push them they will build on an all Chinese stack

That's alright. It delays them at least.


Sure, then hopefully makes them stronger

finally a cloud 'vendor' that understands that modern computers are fast.

if we go back to the principle that modern computers are really fast, SSDs are crazy fast

and we remove the extra cruft of abstractions - software will be easier to develop - and we wouldn't have people shilling 'agents' as a way for faster development.

ultimately the bottleneck is our own thinking.

simple primitives, simpler thinking.


this is dope work.

I have said it before in another comment - on a related post.

It's wild that Southern US which gets most of the sun - has relatively little solar compared to the North - which gets less sun days - but has more solar.

the damage politics has done to the US is crazy n sad.


Is this blog potentially suspect/misleading? Up-thread someone pointed out another source for PV production with rankings:

  1 - California
  2 - Texas
  3 - Florida
  4 - Arizona
  5 - North Carolina
  6 - Nevada
  7 - New York
https://seia.org/solar-state-by-state/

And here's a different source for residential PV:

https://www.statista.com/statistics/1419901/us-residential-g...

  1 - California
  2 - Arizona
  3 - Texas
  4 - Florida
  5 - New York
Is there any chance that people are jumping to incorrect conclusions?


Optimistically, I would expect to see more panels in raw numbers up north due to necessarily overbuilding the capacity to account for fewer sun-hours per year.

Well also the desert southwest is still relatively sparsely populated, so rooftop solar won't show up as much on a map like this. Plus their power is cheap(er) than CA.

But yeah, you'd expect some bigger utility-scale installations.


Many utility scale solar plants are indeed being built out in the desert. The Antelope Valley and along the 15 corridor in particular, as they have the power distribution lines already in place. However even along 80 you’ll see a few.

They tend to be where high voltage distribution lines leave high demand urban areas, and the land gets cheap enough.

A lot of other places just need some high tension power lines, and it will happen. Permitting for those is a nightmare.


IIRC we are at the point now where the cost of high tension lines is significantly greater than just overbuilding the PV. No need to put all the panels out in the southwest and run wires everywhere, just put 2x, 3x, or whatever you need much closer to where you need it and skip those expensive lines.

There are no open spaces close enough to demand to avoid high tension power lines - at least not without demolishing all the customers houses.

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