The Chinese Wall legal strategy is to have Team A produce a specification and Team B produce an implementation.
If these guys can't show a specification they're screwed.
Claiming there must have been one in abstract Platonic space inside the LLM network black box isn't going to convince a Court.
So do the work of making an actual specification generator. Then write a coder. It's not impossible. You still won't get updates, fixes, support, community, or features added. The guys who just steal ffmpeg won't even bother. The AGPL haters might bite.
Also, he seems quite angry.
Even worse, a lot of people prefer underground cables.
You'll have to run active cooling lines with those wires underground. And guess how often active cooling will fail, resulting in need to keep digging those cables up?
This is made worse by the "15 minute city" push which ensures that home charging is just not going to be a thing in any meaningful capacity.
It's probably more about performance. That instant torque and one pedal driving makes a lot of otherwise normal drivers into awful drivers.
I've seen this happen with quite a few people. Man switches from normal car to Tesla, starts speeding. Because it just accelerates so damnably fast, and it feels good that it does.
"Tesla smile" is a meme for a reason.
And neither of them are going into actual production cars.
First time dealing with "this how we do marketing in PRC"?
When gas hits $10 there may be too much pressure to bring in BYD to stop it. At least atomic energy isn't more sensitive to global price shocks than it needs to be (EPA being the champion of high energy prices).
Automated lights-out factories are a total game changer and basically nobody cares if domestic auto workers lose their jobs due to sales collapse or to automation. It didn't have to be this way but Kissinger sold out Middle America so GM became a sales tactic for GMAC loans. We'd need a time machine to stop the collapse of the US auto industry at this point. Or a total fascist takeover of industry and crippling tariffs (not ruling this out).
Toyota and Datsun used to be shit brands fifty years ago. Now we have Lexus and Infinity. Heck we had those 20 years after they were shit brands.
But Tundra engines are getting famous now for lasting 6000 miles before blowing up, so perhaps the torch is being passed.
Yes, "to bring Jesus back".
They actually believe this. Like, you can spend money to get God to change his calendar.
We don't have to believe it - we only need to understand that they believe it. Red heifers, Gog and Magog, Third Temple, they jump up and down and speak in tongues when you talk about it.
Meanwhile Americans spend 60% of their wages on taxes and regulations and don't complain. They vote for anti-war, anti-spending candidates and get the shaft after elections. $10 gas might actually change things.
>Now how about finding a way to do it with silicon-based rather than lithium-based batteries so that we're not using costly mines to create the batteries?
Why silicon rather than sodium?
Sodium is right under lithium in Group 1.
>> The company also announced plans to begin mass delivery of sodium-ion batteries in the fourth quarter. Sodium-ion technology is seen as a lower-cost alternative that could reduce dependence on lithium, cobalt, and nickel.
Damned cat!
> Then they just need to keep doing that for the new code.
"You Insensitive Claude, why haven't you made Thunderbird multi-threaded yet?"
(there appears to be evidence of significant limitations in its understanding of complex code)
> Is it appropriate to cite the old proverb, "Physician, heal thyself" here?
Years before the physician was a fentanyl addict living in a cardboard box on the street you would have been compassionate to do so.
At some point you just can't help people who don't want to be helped.
It's sad because the physician was once a happy baby who gave his mother delight. So much waste of care and resources.
Most likely a combination of domestic problems, mental health issues (maybe*), random violence and a few anti-technology Ted Kaczynskis running around.
Most people with high level security clearances are watched by counter intelligence. Not always because they are untrustworthy, but they are targets for blackmail. Dead scientists do foreign adversaries no good. Same for missing scientists. They are best kept at their job, copying stuff.
*Mental health? Counter intel does make use of behavioral analysis resources. As one person there put it, they don't want another Jonathan Pollard slipping through.
nothing related to NASA indicates a national security threat
Makes sense. NASA poses no risk that humans will ever be able to leave this planet long term. Add SLS to that and the aliens are probably sitting back,eating popcorn.
It's just like a giant Kerbal Space Program game.
It would be a problematic precedent if there were criminal liability
Here is a list of examples from the pre-AI era kindly put together for me by Claude... With the prosecuting attorneys' party-affiliations, because BeauHD felt it is important:
MAC user's dynamic debugging list evaluator? Never heard of that.