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I think the emphasis on doing X "without being shown" is misguided. Brute force is always an option, we already know that, but explicit teaching is more efficient.

The actual holy grail of AI is transfering knowledge. Play Minecraft, learn that you can mine diamonds. Later on when observing the real world, consider that perhaps diamonds are out there and perhaps some steps need to be taken.


Callous.


> First thing every morning and last thing every night, I go outside and take in the sights, the sounds, the light.

I have the suspicion that many of these approaches to insomnia are invented by people who've never been through, and based solely on what they imagine not being able to sleep is like.


You can run an LLM on a Mac laptop?


They're quite good at it, actually.


Why does this matter?

I can't pick my own domain when using Gmail, and still works just fine.


It matters because on your own domain you control the MX records (Mail eXchange) servers.

So, if Mozilla Thundermail were to disappear, you can switch servers on the MX record to another email provider with little downtime if done correctly.

You also become the sovereign of your email. Should your Google account get banned (a news like these hit HN once a month), you are left to start over changing email address in every service you use.

Not to mention dead accesses to SSO, because the Google account would be inaccesible by then.


I don't understand. You don't control any Mx records. You have an account with some company. You might lose it just like you might lose your Gmail account.

Also... You can use Gmail with your own domain. I don't get the meme with mx records.


> I don't understand. You don't control any Mx records.

Yes, you do (on your own domain).

> You have an account with some company. You might lose it just like you might lose your Gmail account.

Yes, but if you use your own domain, the same account username can exist on another provider. I can still write you an email to "firstname[at]firstnamelastname.com" and reach you.

As for the email messages, if you do email correctly (by downloading emails to a local email client, and then creating backups, or at the very least, using Google Takeout to export your mailbox regularly), you don't have to lose your email messages.

> Also... You can use Gmail with your own domain. I don't get the meme with mx records.

Exactly my point. By then, you use Google Workspace, which is an email provider to your own domain.

If you wanted to switch to Microsoft 365, or Fastmail like I do, I am the sovereign of my email address. Nobody noticed I switched email providers when I changed from Google Workspace to Fastmail, and that's the point.

To be able to dump the provider when you need to. Sovereignty.

> Also... You can use Gmail with your own domain. I don't get the meme with mx records.

Additional reply to this: To use that, you need to fiddle with MX records.


Owning the domain your email address uses gives you a greater degree of ownership over that email address and makes you service provider agnostic.

Using an @gmail.com address for example, if you decide to move to another service provider at some point or especially if your Google account gets banned, you’re stuck manually migrating over however many things you have attached to your address (some of which may not be easy or possible without access to the original address).

In contrast, if your address is on a domain you own, the provider becomes moot. It doesn’t matter if you migrate or get banned, you still have your email address, and after a small blip between providers all is as it was.


Can't speak for op, but for me it's a question of control. If this service ends up closing or otherwise loses me as a customer, I have to update every single contact and account before I can stop using it. That's not practical. If I bring my own domain, I can switch providers much more easily.

Some people might be ok with losing contact with the long tail after an email provider migration, but I'm not one of those people.


> I can't pick my own domain when using Gmail, and still works just fine.

I do. I've used my own domain with GMail for many years. I moved it there from another provider when Google were giving such things away for free to beta users.

Perhaps I should move on again and avoid the big data kleptomania.


CaNt UnDeRsTaNd WhY pEoPlE aRe BuLlIsH.

ItS jUsT a StOcHaStIc PaRtOt.


There's another with the same vibe for Tetris. I believe it's called fistful of quarters. Not nearly as good, but great soundtrack.


The youtube channel Summoning Salt made a great video that covers the history of Tetris world records: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mOJlg8g8_yw


Highly recommend Summoning Salt in general. I never thought I'd find video game speed runs, records, etc, interesting, but his videos end up being very entertaining. His pacing, tone, and the way he works in music are very effective.



That's the one I meant, great soundtrack. So I'm confusing names with something else.


Fistful of quarters was the subtitle of King of Kong


Does anyone else find interesting that people who write blog posts saying "my favourite language is X", it's never a mainstream language..?


Successful language designers select for what's popular, not what's good.

C++ intersected the mass of C programmers with the new OO fad, and kept all of C's warts. Had Stroustrup made C++ better, he wouldn't have an army of adopters who already knew C. Maybe merit will win out in the long run [1]? I'm not hopeful.

Java needed to be close enough to C++, and C# to Java. And Brendan Eich joined Netscape to "put Scheme in the browser".

[1] https://www.theregister.com/2025/03/02/c_creator_calls_for_a...


My favorite language is Python, but I wouldn't write a blog post about it because no one would care.


My favourite language is also python, and I would love to read your blog post on why your favourite language is python :-)


New mainstream languages are rarer than new better (in some way that can be favorable) languages.


> people who write blog posts ... never a mainstream language

Don't you find it amusing that food critics usually write about little-known or new restaurants and never do any fast-food chain reviewing?


Wait, she's not going to be locked up?


She might be, but so far she is free on a $2 million bail since her 2023 arrest.


They allow the things that they themselves had when they were kids. They just have a fond memory of the past. Just look at the way they style their houses.


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