51 lines
2.9 KiB
YAML
51 lines
2.9 KiB
YAML
- url: https://pando.beehiiv.com/p/javascript-was-slowing-me-down-all-in-on-elixir
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name: "Roberto Pando: Javascript was slowing me down. All in on Elixir"
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summary: >
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I love to hear these kind of stories about adopting Elixir. I went through a similar
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arc when I moved from Python/Django, to Node, to Ruby/Rails, and finally to Phoenix/Elixir.
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- url: https://darthmall.net/weblog/2023/rss/
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name: "Evan Sheehan: RSS?"
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summary: >
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There's a swing back to RSS right now, which I think is good. But I also think that Evan's
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thoughts here are good. RSS can't be the only solution for how we take in the web. It can't
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be the only solution for how we decentralize the web again.
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Hat tip to [Greg Morris](https://gregmorris.co.uk/2024/01/29/visit-more-blogs) for his related
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post that helped me find this one.
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- url: https://ethanmarcotte.com/wrote/generative/
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name: "Ethan Marcotte: Generative"
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summary: >
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A collection of quotes about AI from 1683 to 2024.
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- url: https://seldo.com/posts/ai-ml-llms-and-the-future-of-software
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name: "Laurie Voss: On AI, ML, LLMs and the future of software"
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summary: >
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A level-headed explanation of what exactly AI, ML, and LLMs are. "LLMs are really complex markov
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chains; but the really complex part makes them qualitatively different" has been by go-to
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explanation of LLMs. I disagree, however, with the idea that LLMs "understand" anything. LLMs
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contain big statistical models of sentence and paragraph structure, and of the relationship
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between words and phrases. This allows them to generate text that is more of a statistical match
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for text written by humans. That humans see this as "understanding" is a form of pareidolia.
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This distinction is narrow, but important.
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- url: https://coryd.dev/posts/2024/towards-a-quieter-friendlier-web/
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name: "Cory Dransfeldt: Towards a quieter, friendlier web"
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summary: >
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A series of great principles for a better web! Hear, hear!
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Side note: thanks to Cory for inspiring me to add a link log feed to this site,
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inspired by his at coryd.dev.
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- url: https://www.abstractmachines.dev/posts/am013-easy-to-write-code-considered-harmful/
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name: "Leandro Ostera: AM013 – Easy-to-Write Code Considered Harmful"
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summary: >
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Leandro argues that the key to writing readable code is taking implicit context
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and making it explicit. I agree!
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This is also one reason I love Elixir. Many of the design choices in the language
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and standard library encourage you to explicitly write what you mean-- even if it
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is more keystrokes.
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- url: https://soatok.blog/2024/02/27/the-tech-industry-doesnt-understand-consent/
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name: "Soatok: The Tech Industry Doesn't Understand Consent"
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summary: >
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A brilliant lens for thinking about our relationship with tech products, design,
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and terms of use. Opt-out "consent" isn't consent at all. "Maybe Later" isn't
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consent either.
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