When i feel i need to totally turn off, I'll turn on a podcast of something im somewhat interested in, and play a game that commands just a slight amount of attention, and pay a slight amount of attention to both things.
I think it read well, perhaps too intimidating for some to get into after the first couple paragraphs, but i think it's pretty much tailored at the audience here. I'm resistant to calling it obviously AI as well, the ideas are well thought out and it flows just fine, its certainly not a "here my article title and 2 sentence overview of whats its about, now write it", level of assistance, which i think your comment is kinda making it seem as though it is.
This has me considering law school vs something like, officiating a sport. A foul in basketball, or a balk in baseball are very much just judgement calls by the respective officials, kinda you know it when you see it. You can write down what a foul is, or what a balk is, and if you play by the letters of the rules in place, you will likely have a miserable game and it will be entirely the official's fault, you can also have a game where clear "fouls" are being committed but not called unless they go beyond what has been set as the baseline acceptable level of play(not in the spirit of defense or whatever), and it could be considered a wonderful game by all parties involved (let them play in action).
Kinda has me wondering about the implications of the BAR being the end all be all of a law school. Contrast it with a Doctor's residency and i think law school is very much crafting an overly binary right/wrong profession, and perhaps they should have something beyond it more akin to something like officiating a sports game, where they see potential implications of being too stringent applying their rule system when there is certainly room for being charitable.
It is a complex issue though, because the charitable interpretation of a law gives way for bad actors to abuse that interpretation.
Now bridge this all with all the weird 1st level and 2nd level stuff surrounding medicine that is placed there by people outside of the field of medicine and imposed on an expert of the medical field. They have to apply their expertise to the patient, decide a course of action, and then describe that action in those 1st/2nd level terms to a non expert who for some reason is the deciding authority, despite downgrading the expert's actual thoughts by design. I know im all over the place, but it was a pretty good article that made me think about a lot of different applications of the ideas.
> And research shows young people are particularly at risk of sports gambling problems, lured in by splashy advertisements often featuring celebrities and promises of low risks and high rewards. The Fed study found that the sharpest drop in credit delinquency rates were among people under 40 years old.
There are so many portions of the post Muprhy vs NCAA world that bum me out, but this is by far what makes me the most annoyed. There seem to be so many objectives being achieved while hiding behind the guise of protecting the children. Yet we just let these advertisements slide by and infest broadcasts that children largely consume. Not like getting an older person to buy you a GTA game when you are 12 or something either, this is just watching any sort of sports broadcast, aimed at all ages.
I see some other people here mentioning how we gave into legalized state lotteries and its why we arrived here, its such a stark difference though. There was a ton of back and forth for state lotteries, the results were tons of advertising restrictions, and the profits largely benefited the education system.
Murphy vs NCAA was passed in 2018, we have legal sports betting now in 38 total states after ~8 total years.
New Hampshire legalized state lotteries in 1964, from that point it took 32 years to reach 38 total states with some form of a state lottery.
> the profits largely benefited the education system.
The profits didn't benefit shit. Yes, the money went into education, and that same education system saw commensurate cuts from regular tax revenue.
What it did is shift the state's tax burden towards people who play the lottery... While permanently entrenching the lottery (How can we ban it! It would gut our education budget!).
I agree with your point, its something i kinda didn't really consider how its perversely intertwining itself with the education budget and making itself effectively immune.
I still think its a solid demonstration that comparable sports betting legislation surely lacked any sort of compromise at all, as it was all pushed through so aggressively fast.
When I was in college I got lured into one of those pyramid schemes advertised in the middle of the night hoping to make extra money. I wonder how much money I would have lost if I had instant access to betting on a "sure thing" back then.
i've still got about 9$USD left from that last free credit round, I am a poor example though. I think i keep a strange amount of discipline compared to most when it comes to usage. I see why it happens to people where stuff is just burned fast, and I've even caught myself a few times in moments where i wasn't monitoring properly and COULD have destroyed my usage and perhaps just got lucky that whatever i asked wasn't causing loops.
I also really dislike compacting though, and perhaps that is the catalyst for why i never burn unexpected amounts. In my Claude.md i have instructions to wrap up work around 150k tokens, from there i usually have enough of a window of tokens to decide what to do with the work done that session.
sometimes thats a simple ya, in those situations i use the remaining usage to have claude update .claude/ with relevant changes, if i've got more wiggle room for tokens, i might even craft up my next plan which is usually TDD style, and i have it write the failing tests before ending the session and passing the handoff.md which is the finished plan to a fresh context window.
This is probably not the best way for rapidly getting stuff done, but i think its one of the best ways to be effective with less usage at your disposal.
Plenty to hate on anthropic for right now, but Ill never understand the references to output as a slot machine.
It is massively a skill based tool, you CAN use it like a slot machine with "please make it work" style prompts. The variance is the difference, if you feed it great context and/or relevant sources to utilize, your odds of success increase dramatically.
Slot machines, it doesn't matter how much thought you put into your pull, you will have the same odds as literally any other person pulling the lever.
It seems like there are still healthy ways to do it, I see some products sold by third party sellers that clearly are real small businesses. I google them find their real site and sometimes they offer pricing better than what they can offer after amazon fees etc.
I see that as the absolute best approach for someone like that, leverage the platform but don't allow it to be your entire online presence.
My own use case was sadly, just leveraging the platform and as all the margins tighten not only on the amazon platform itself but on shipping costs, it just gets tougher and tougher. Happy for the experiences they offered me freedom wise, but also happy to be moving on.
Well, they need to ensure AI advances, and that means advancing the podcast that will pretend that popular opinion is absurd and big tech is always right.
seems about right. They came across as the yes men of podcasts for tech people that want to pretend they are doing no wrong, maybe i just chose a really rough 10 minute section of a random podcast though, but not one moment did they not come across in that manner.
maybe there isnt, but as understanding grows people will understand that having an orchestration agent delegate simple work to lesser agents is significant not only for cost savings, but also for preserving context window space.
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