

It’s cool to rewrite simple libraries to understand how code works at lower levels.
What style of formatting are you using? It seems peculiar at times.


It’s cool to rewrite simple libraries to understand how code works at lower levels.
What style of formatting are you using? It seems peculiar at times.


I was enthusiastic about this project. But I am afraid these recent tangents will only reduce momentum.


Got it! Really cool puzzle. I used to enjoy solving puzzles like this, but nowadays I don’t spend time in that.


These threats to ban social media have shown that this topic is all about power and control and nothing about the people. Instead of investing in long term, sustainable solutions - less centralized networks, open algorithms, interoperable protocols - countries have been trying to reduce exposure to the internet to minimize damage.


I have talked with the author to confirm what he meant with this and other posts he made on compilation. He has confirmed that most (if not all) C compilers are not deterministic. He has pointed me to here as an example. He added that optimizations are not applied in deterministic order and when you add LTO it worsens the problem.


I agree that LLM are made to be more exploratory, this is good as it allows them to experiment with more different topic, as opposed to always saying the same. However, I do not agree it is a feature for code generation, as you would need it to follow strict ruleset (code syntax, specification, tests). Whatever errors it generates and people accept are little mistakes in the threshold of acceptance for the person and a tradeoff for the cost of fixing the problem. In some contexts we see people focusing almost only on short term which leads to a lot of errors being allowed.
Moreover, you cannot say compilers are deterministic. There are situations where they are not (at least for the user).
https://krystalgamer.github.io/high-level-game-patches/
GCC’s unwarranted behaviour
In order to keep the code as small as possible I was compiling the code with -Os. Everything was working fine until I started to remove some printfs and started to get some crashes. Moving function calls around also seemed to randomly fix the problem, this was an indication that somehow memory/stack corruption was happening. After a lot of testing, I figured out that if -O2/-O3/-Os were used then the problem would appear. The issue was caused by Interprocedural analysis or IPA. One of its functions is to determine whether registers are polluted across function calls and if not then re-use them.


a relative time formatting library that contains no code
The library is two text files (code) that are processed by an LLM (interpreter) to generate code of another type. This is not that new in terms of workflow.
I think what makes this the worst is the fact that the author admits that you can’t be sure the library will work until you generate the code and test it. Even then you cannot guarantee the security of the generated code and as you do not understand the code you also cannot give support or patch it.
When Performance Matters
If performance of a datetime processor is not relevant, what is? The author mentions they would like a browser implementation to be fast, documentable, fixable. However, operative systems, browsers, and other complex systems are made of little utilities like this that have very well documented functionalities and side effects.
But the above isn’t fully baked. Our models will get better, our agents more capable.
The whole assumption is that instead of creating a good stable base that anyone can use we should be just shtting out code until it works.
Eventually the hardware will be good enough to support a shitty bloated browser so we don’t need to optimize it.
Eventually people will harden their PC enough so we shouldn’t care about security.


Low effort pizza is the best dish.


This election had high turnout for a presidential. Some of the leaders on the right are afraid to admit support for Seguro, but you already see some others saying they will vote for him. Ventura is too extreme for most and that is why many went with Gouveia.


I guess the point of using only text is to test how far you can go with performance. Using plaintext, or a simple markup language, also forces you to not do the things you can do with HTML.
Image a news website where the focus is the actual news, instead of the weirdly sized max-contrast cookie banner, or the weird space left for ads that do not load because of uBO.


It seems plaintext blogs are a weird child of smallweb design.
I think it would be best to have some kind of markup to identify links, and provide other things like italics, bold, subscript, superscript. For example, as in gemini protocol.


Crucially, the document reveals that EU governments see metadata – specifically traffic and location history – as the most vital tool for law enforcement.
Ah, yes. Store data at the risk of it being hacked or used by companies in order to protect the people from themselves.


The paragraph you quoted says he was Australian.


We have won, but at what cost…

At least the weather is very cool and stable in underground prepper bunkers.
Came for the ‘should degenerate’