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Comment Re: Not exactly shocking (Score 2) 99

While that is certainly true, it leaves China as a whole in a really good place with regards to actually producing EVs in the future as Chinese cities transition the vast majority of cars to electric. They have the technology, know how, and experience now. Whereas we have none of those things.

Obviously the CCP knows that their distortion of the market ultimately puts us at a disadvantage and helps their corrupt buddies. But our governments are also good at distorting markets to help rich people, such as what's happening now in Iran and the price of oil, to say nothing about drumming up consumer demand for oil and ICE vehicles.

Comment Re:Oblig.: (Score 1) 37

Linux support on the M series chips is not amazing, Asahi Linux notwithstanding. Since this is a iPhone CPU, I suspect Linux support will be even worse.

Although honestly the Linux experience on any ARM device is not great in my experience.

What I'd like to know is whether you can enable loading of unsigned kernel extensions with this CPU like you can with the normal Macs and their M chips. Or if the phone-style lock down of hardware is present here with this CPU.

Comment Re:He's not entirely wrong; but... (Score 1) 214

To be fair, it's good practice to use as much RAM as possible for caching. Many programs will cache more things in their resident set if the memory is available.

Gleaning useful information on memory usage is difficult on modern OS's with advanced virtual memory systems. Disabling swap might reveal memory pressure more readily, or if swap is on, load average sometimes reveals it.

Comment Re:Dit it actually decompile it? (Score 1) 85

When I asked Claude Opus to disassemble the code and add comments, it did that, yes. I'd post it here (with comments) but it would trip the lame lameness filter. Ironic that posting code to slashdot is considered "junk."

That's kind of interesting to consider that the model is large enough to encode an assembler and disassembler in its parameter matrix.

Comment Re:Not Copilot or OpenAI (Score 1) 85

So after Opus 4.6 gave up, I finally gave it the list of bugs that Russinovich has in his post. After it was pointed out to it my instance of Opus confirmed the DORESTORE missing line-not-found check bug and explained why it was a problem. However it disagreed with one of the other issues found by Russinovich's Opus instance. It said: "Token comparison logic bug â" That other Opus instance was wrong here. The JMP $0314 goes to the CMP, not the LDA. The accumulator retains the token byte. It's correct." Funny to see it arguing with itself. So not sure what to make of all this.

Comment Re:Not Copilot or OpenAI (Score 1) 85

I found his original code and I tried Opencode on it with OpenCode Zen Big Pickle, which is really a Chinese model called GLM. It did admirably. It disassembled the code and made some sort of sense out of it, but it definitely did not find the bugs.

On the other hand Claude Opus failed too for me. It claimed there was a bug that would prevent the example usage code given in the article from even working at all, which is clearly false. It did work. So it missed the bugs that Russinovich found with his Claude session. This is with Opus 4.6.

Comment Re:Not Copilot or OpenAI (Score 1) 85

Not really. Claude is considered the best for coding and analysis. The others are not too bad either, but not quite as good as opus 4.6. So it's logical he'd use Claude for this personal experiment. If you think it's political you're adding that yourself. However it would be interesting to take the original apple ii buggy code and see if the other coding affects can find the same bugs.

Comment Re: Anthropic played this horribly (Score 3, Informative) 136

But as had been said that's not what happened. They signed a contract and agreed to terms. Then later the DoD wanted to change the terms and Anthropic said no. In retaliation hegseth and Trump declared them a supply risk. Which was certainly unprecedented and probably not legal.

Comment Re:Build them in the US to bypass tariffs (Score 1) 67

The EV market in the US is pretty well saturated by the incumbents. Every upper middle class person who wants an EV pretty much has one, and usually as a second vehicle.

As for the rest, EVs could be a real boon if they were affordable to them, domestic auto makers aren't that interested in this market, even for ICE vehicles. And even a company that might be, such as Slate Auto, is having a really hard time keeping the price down. By the time their little truck is really ready to go, I suspect it will be closer to $30k, still too high for the lower class frankly.

Comment Re: Withdrawn from USA (Score 1) 67

But it's not just tariffs. It's also the rolling back of certain mandates that made selling EVs attractive or even necessary in the US market. Besides that the fact is EVs aren't doing all that well in the US market. It's a similar situation in Canada. Since Canada is a much, much smaller market than the US, I expect Hyundai to similarly discontinue that same model there also.

Comment Re: Not clean room (Score 1) 47

The difference is most humans don't have a perfect memory. And those that do, if they were to put an entire extract from a copyrighted work in their own work would called on it. And people have been successfully sued for copyright infringement over creating something that was too much like something else they had heard or read, even if it was the product of their own mind.

LLMs have been shown over and over again to be able to reproduce literary works word for word if you prompt them in just the right way. They could reproduce code also.

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