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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 11th, 2023

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  • Do you not see the contradiction in this statement? Where do you find the line of what is stealing and “working as intented”?

    If you redistribute someone else’s open source code as open source but change nothing why would I get it from you and not the original developer? There is no incentive and no reward to “steal”.

    If you make enough changes to create additional value I might and then it is “working as intended”



  • The developer can yank the software from under you, he can change the monetisation model, or he can drop support for the software. With Free or Open Source software you could just take over the responsibility of maintainership or outsource it some other developer you can trust instead.

    Sure, good point but in the real world this will never happen.

    If Mozilla suddenly decides to implode you won’t just casually take over Firefox or hire another maintainer to develop it for you.

    In theory this sounds nice but for any software that is of any real complexity (and thus use) it is pretty much irrelevant.







  • Being close (and “sometimes” precise) to the intended meaning is an equally useless metric to measure performance.

    Depending on what you allow for “well close enough I think” asking ChatGPT to tell a story without any reading of fMRI would get you to these results. Especially if you know beforehand it’s gonna be a story told.


  • It’s the other way round. Code is being written to fit how a specific machine works. This is what makes Assembly so hard.

    Also there is by design no understanding required, a machine doesn’t “get” what you are trying to do it just does what is there.

    If you want a machine to understand what specific code does and modify that for another machine that is extremely hard because the machine would need to understand the semantics of the operation. It would need to “get” what you were doing which isn’t happening.