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I see some questions around the methodology of the testing. But is this representative of Ruby? Several minutes total when most finish under a second?


I’ve been meaning to start decompiling one of my favorite games of the era (Hulk Ultimate Destruction) after watching the decomp of other games. Perhaps this is a sign to start?

My personal conspiracy theory is that they're actually the same person, perhaps with some time traveling hijinks?

I would like some real world comparisons. How much power does the laptop or desktop consume during these (likely multi hour) sessions? Assuming you’re using a large HDR monitor 50-100W isn’t unreasonable and at 8 hours a day you’re talking about at least 2 days before you crack 1000kwh like his sessions do. But then a personal desktop on a gaming session can easily pull 1000w (cpu + gpu + peripherals). So comparing it to a gaming session seems fair.


GTA 6 Forever?


I know this is my late 1900s American background speaking, but it is insane to me to have a legally binding donation to a religious authority. I would argue a significant portion of the New Testament talks about how much more important it is to do things for the right reason than just doing the thing. Donating to the church because you are forced to seems like it defeating the point of what tithes are about.


In 18th century England, priests played a semi-political role, perhaps equivalent to a contemporary head of a local council. In addition to religious duties, they effectively administered their parish.

The monarch was (and titularly remains) the Supreme Governor of the Church of England, and senior church positions were appointed by parliament.

The tithe was more a local tax rather than a religious offering.


Agreed. I'm reminded of "debt the first 5000 years" where the author talks about the tricky business of giving gifts to kings and how it usually ends up being a tax later on. Given sufficient power, I wouldn't expect a church to be any different.


Agreed, just because something is useful for helpful doesn’t mean it’s easy to monetize.


I wonder if there’s a jammer out there that also sends WiFi deauth packets


Plenty, this is something off the shelf consumer hardware can be modified to do.

However it's not super effective anymore as 802.11w (protected management frames) is a thing and mandatory for WPA3: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_802.11w-2009


Ah I’m a few years out of date but I’ll admit I don’t see many WPA3 APs in homes


It’s fascinating that many of the issues they faced I’ve seen in human software engineering teams.

Things like integration creating bottlenecks or a lack of consistent top down direction leading to small risk adverse changes instead of bold redesigns. All things I’ve seen before.


At least the AI teams aren't politically competing against each other unlike human teams.

(Or are they?)


I do not understand why we haven’t seen someone take a cybertruck and drop a new body on top. I see “put a model 3 into x” on YouTube all the time.

I would love to buy a cybertruck chassis with a VW bus or minivan on top (current political issues of Tesla aside).


The Cybertruck is a unibody, not body on frame, so it would be a lot of work.


Not only that, it's aluminum. The first bit of work would be giving it a real frame.


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