Things from internet

I love reading on the internals of frontier AI models, and this is one of the best reads on that: Opus Soul Document. I keep thinking that we need to intentionally think how human babies absorb knowledge and approach teaching models in the similar manner , only codifying tacit knowledge for llm consumption. I am also super curious if Yann LeCunn is right and LLM is a dead end and we will need a different approach altogether. However even if he is right, there is much to improve in the current state of llm-based AI.


Washington Post article(or archive link) about Oscar Wilde’s Portrait of Dorian Gray is a nice read, and now I want to re-read it and see the play!


37Signals always had special place in my heart, maybe it is Rails to blame, maybe it is their books, but never the less. Two pieces that I came across today were Radiating Programmer and Modern CSS, which was mentioned here. I remember fun and sorrows of updating websites over FTP with Cyberduck and it warms my heart that we are removing some levels of complexity that were built in past two decades. Is it google to blame for starting it with Closure compiler?

After ruminating on Radiating Programmer and looking back at my career I find that my lack of practice of writing is the single factor that limited me the most.

And with all the modern CSS, this was my favorite part:

@media (any-hover: hover) and (pointer: fine) {
  /* Reveal the button only on hover */
}

@media (any-hover: none) and (pointer: coarse) {
  /* Show the button all the time */
}

This is especially magical with a device like the iPad Pro. Which can match both queries under certain conditions, and change on-the-fly. When it’s docked on the Magic Keyboard with built-in trackpad, it matches the first query and the ••• buttons are hidden until you hover. Lift it off the Magic Keyboard and it becomes a purely touch device—the ••• buttons magically appear. It’s very cool.


I like buying old books. Used book stores is one of the best places in general, and if it is connected with coffee shop, every time I feel I can just live there. Very often though, I would buy a book because I liked the title, and forget about it, especially know, when I have great big bookshelves that I can keep filling in for quite some time. I found book I bought last year that I was really eager to read and completely forgot about it’s existence – A PARODY OUTLINE OF HISTORY by Donald Ogden Stewart. Book was in a bad shape, so i was happy to see it is published on Gutenberg, so i can read it on my iPad, but also I did not connect 2 and 2 that this is same guy who wrote Philadelphia Story. Book itself turned out to be a satire (doh!) of HG Wells’ The Outline of History, and Wells is the very first sci-fi writer I ever read. I think I was 5 and The Magic Shop completely blew my mind. I read most of the other short stories from his book I had after. I could not finish the The War of the Worlds, and switched to some fantasy book instead, can’t remember what it was though.