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> only to have it completely obsoleted a few years later?

That sure beats having it completely obsoleted a few weeks later, which sometimes feels like the situation with AI


Once had a Porsche 914. Air cooled engine. Drove it across Montana and the Dakotas one winter. One very cold winter.

Not sure the engine ever reached "operating temperature" on that drive.


Sticking a piece of cardboard over a portion of the radiator was a common sight during the winter when I was growing up in rural Ohio. I didn't think our winters were that cold, but maybe late 70s to early 80s vehicles were more susceptible to running cold.

I had a car that developed a stuck-open thermostat and did the cardboard trick to get by until I could replace the faulty part.


I've had that happen, too, on a [more] regular car. I drove a Mustang 5.0 from Oklahoma to Oregon, and as I went through eastern Colorado the coolant temperature steadily dropped until it was resting at the bottom of the gauge. I don't recall whether the gas mileage suffered noticeably or not during that phase of the drive.

Why do we need people to consume when we have the government?

Serious question. As in, we built the last 100 years on "the american consumer", the idea that it would be the people buying everything. There is no reason that needs to or necessarily will continue-- don't get me wrong, I kind of hope it does, but my hopes don't always predict what actually happens.

What if the next 100 is the government buying everything, and the vast bulk of the people are effectively serfs. Who HAVE to stay in line otherwise they go to debt prison or tax prison where they become slaves (yes, the US has a fairly large population of prison laborers who are forced to work for 15-50 cents/hour. The lucky ones can earn as much as $1.50/hour. https://www.prisonpolicy.org/blog/2017/04/10/wages/


where will the government get the money to buy anything if the billionaires and their mega corps have it all and spend sufficient amounts to keep the government from taxing. we have a k shape economy where the capital class is extracting all of the value from the working class who are headed to subsistence levels of income and the low class dies in the ditch.

Here's hoping you are chinese, then.

Well, I tried to specifically frame it in a neutral way, to outline the thinking that pretty much all the major nations / companies currently have on this topic.

Why?

> A subset of the population doesn't have self control?

please fix this to

A subset of the population who has not yet reached the age of consent

I think society broadly accepts that there are different expectations for children and adults; the line is currently officially drawn somewhere around 18-21 years old.


But in Europe you can drink at 14. Age of consent is also 14.

So, no, there is no official line at 18-21. Especially in the EU.


> But in Europe you can drink at 14. Age of consent is also 14.

That is hilariously general. You're conflating a lot of different nations there. In practice; its different depending on the nation, consent is usually 16 and alcohol is ~18.


I was referring to Germany, the largest EU nation. But sure let's look at percentages.

40% of the EU has age of consent 14 or lower. (Germany, Italy, Portugal, etc.) 78% of the EU has it at 15 or lower (France, Sweden, Denmark, etc.)

No 'official line' at 18-21.


its more complicated than that, the age of consent you're listing doesn't necessarily universally apply and is mostly that low when both people are within that age bracket. In Germany for example the age of consent is effectively 16, its more that there's wiggle room to 14, if both parties are under 21.

Don't know enough about your neighborhood, and I might have misread your comment (the "under the eaves" makes me think these are outdoor)

but as someone who appreciates darkness I'd be really upset to live near someone who did this.

Unless you can keep your light on your property (as in, you are extremely rural).

why are you lighting up outside unless you are outside in the light?


The lights are indeed outdoor, and cover most of my backyard. It's a neighborhood within a major metropolitan area, but the light doesn't bleed beyond my property lines.

As for the "why", the answer is security. If someone attempts to hide in my yard, they'll find it quite difficult to remain unseen.

Most of my neighbors have floodlights of their own (though mine are easily the brightest), and I've gotten no complaints in the years I've had them. If any of my neighbors voiced concerns about them, I would try to work with them to find a solution. I have to live next to them, so it only makes sense to stay on good terms.


My neighbour has a motion activated flood light. It's annoying. Not annoying enough to risk a feud by telling them though. It also completely ruins any natural habitat for nocturnal animals.

The whole concept of permanently lighting your garden is crazy! Where do you live that you're so worried about people hiding in your yard? Could you not solve that with cameras and an infra-red floodlight?


Even infrared is weird to me. Insects and other creatures living in the garden have issues with it, while they are important for a healthy environment ...

I live in a not-so-great area of town. There were two murders in the last 6 months. One in my neighborhood, and the other in an adjacent public park.

The always-on lighting is a deterrent to anyone trying to hide from police.


why does it matter if it is difficult? You are right, these systems should be well understood by now. And public domain.

hey, I appreciate your love of language and sharing with us.

I'm wondering if we couldn't re-think "bit" to the computer science usage instead of the thing that goes in the horse's mouth, and what it would mean for an AI agent to "champ at the bit"?

What new sayings will we want?


Byting at the bit?

Claude code is written in react and uses Ink for rendering. "Ink provides the same component-based UI building experience that React offers in the browser, but for command-line apps. It uses Yoga to build Flexbox layouts in the terminal,"

https://github.com/vadimdemedes/ink


I figured they were doing something like Ink, but interesting to know that they're actually using Ink. Do you have any evidence that's the case?

It doesn't answer the question, though. Ink throttles to at most 30fps (not 60 as the 16ms quote would suggest, though the at most is far more important). That's done to prevent it churning out vast amounts of ASCII, preventing issues like [1], not as some sort of display sync behaviour where missing the frame deadline would be expected to cause tearing/jank (let alone flickering).

I don't mean to be combative here. There must be some real explanation for the flickering, and I'm curious to know what it is. Using Ink doesn't, on it's own, explain it AFAICS.

Edit: I do see an issue about flickering on Ink [2]. If that's what's going on, the suggestion in one of the replies to use alternate screen sounds reasonable and nothing to do with having to render in 16ms. There are tons of TUI programs out there that manage to update without flickering.

[1] https://github.com/gatsbyjs/gatsby/issues/15505

[2] https://github.com/vadimdemedes/ink/issues/359


How about the ink homepage (same link as before), which lists Claude as the first entry under

Who's Using Ink?

    Claude Code - An agentic coding tool made by Anthropic.

Great, so probably a pretty straightforward fix, albeit in a dependency. Ink does indeed write ansiEscapes.clearTerminal [1], which does indeed "Clear the whole terminal, including scrollback buffer. (Not just the visible part of it)" [2]. (Edit: even the eraseLines here [4] will cause flicker.)

Using alternate screen might help, and is probably desirable anyway, but really the right approach is not to clear the screen (or erase lines) at all but just write out the lines and put a clear to end-of-line (ansiEscapes.eraseEndLine) at the end of each one, as described in [3]. That should be a pretty simple patch to Ink.

Likening this to a "small game engine" and claiming they need to render in 16ms is pretty funny. Perhaps they'll figure it out when this comment makes it into Claude's training data.

[1] https://github.com/vadimdemedes/ink/blob/e8b08e75cf272761d63...

[2] https://www.npmjs.com/package/ansi-escapes

[3] https://stackoverflow.com/a/71453783

[4] https://github.com/vadimdemedes/ink/blob/e8b08e75cf272761d63...


which group are you in?


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