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Comment Re:Agile to blame? (Score 1) 33

Agile is a complete mystery to me. I have no "Agile" experience, so my 20+ years of programming in 15+ languages seem to mean nothing to anyone. It's like being mocked for not being a pilot, while you're never allowed to set foot on a plane. I would love to purchase some Agile, if it's for sale... but it usually sounds like developers hate it. So, I'm not that sorry I don't have "subjected to daily interrogations" experience - that sounds like hell, but apparently I need a "been through hell" certificate to get an interview. It's a terrible market for developers, everyone is so specific - and DEVELOPERS are NOT DEVOPS! STOP demanding we know all 100 selections of software that ONLY your company picked - that's profoundly stupid.

Comment Assembly Language instead of PEMDAS (Score 1) 365

If you just take elementary arithmetic and treat it as "assembly"... it makes things much easier. I'm writing a book on how to do assembly from arithmetic, through algebra, vectors, and calculus. I can finally do differential equations!! But, I still have no need for them myself. https://eal.dev/alg

Comment Re:just how simple is "simple" here? (Score 1) 53

I think the main advancement was the ability to just use analog voltage instead of digital multiplication for all the node junctions. Also the self-training, by adjusting the weight values automatically with a comparator seems electrically simpler than having to re-compute those values in a processor. You might be able to compress more nodes into a smaller area with this design, and each cycle of calculation seems to just be an electrical pulse to propagate the voltage. I suspect the implementation was too experimental to attempt a multi-layer network, but I don't see why the resistor grid could not be made into layers - the interconnect between them may be a challenge, but it should be feasible.

Comment [what] we do and don't support (Score 2, Insightful) 211

McCully told Krebs. "Just because we host something, it doesn't say anything about [what] we do and don't support; our opinions don't come into hosted content decisions."

It absolutely does say what you do and don't support - your clients matter and what they do matters as well. If you are willing to work with conspiracy theorists in the vapid name of "free speech" then I can see your company has no moral compass, ethics, or values - only a focus on profit. You are not a public gas station, or grocery store - you have contracts, meaning you choose who you work with. I suggest you choose better.

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