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The name choice is unfortunate. I read it incorrectly the first time.


I read it correctly, but got a laugh after reading your comment. Maybe it could be marketable to two very different demographics


Same here. Imagining now bitch@ as the logo.

EDIT: Name aside, what an awesome project.


Anything with "bit" in (with the T pronounced) is a bit unfortunate for French speakers: https://context.reverso.net/translation/french-english/la+bi... .


Also anything with chat (chatte). Unfortunate or intentional..


"Pour info, j'ai pas la bite qui fouette."


Or intentional and awesome.


Pick better names people. I can't bring myself to use "CockroachDB" for example.


Its almost better when you read it that way. Its at least coherent.


The Ouya finally realized.


Is this just a wrapper around the Microsoft project released a few days ago? https://trellis3d.github.io/


That seems to be the main part of it: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42400537


Well he says he switched to a less intense model to handle the traffic thats more crude, so i don't think its currently using trellis


Yeah, that's why the website is so barebones.


The best place for the latest information isn't tech blogs in my opinion. It's the stable diffusion and local llama subreddits. If you are looking to learn about everything on a fundamental level you need to check out Andrej Karpathy on YouTube. There other some other notable mentions in other people's comments.


I was just about to post the same link. It is really cool tech and Smack Studio is when I first fell in love with the concept. What Adobe has is cool, but I've seen it already.


You may want to check out LiteFS and LiteStream by benbjohnson. There was a time in 2022 where he was trending every week for his projects. The following snippet is taken from the LiteFS webpage. "LiteFS is a distributed file system that transparently replicates SQLite databases. You can run your application like it’s running against a local on-disk SQLite database but behind the scenes the database is replicated to all the nodes in your cluster."


This is so freaking cool! I was mesmerized watching the paddles move as the beat progressed. There are certain things that just look right which makes it beautiful.This project is one of them!


I remember seeing you debate Jason Calacanis from the all in podcast on this week in startups on this exact topic. You are probably one of the most confident, well spoken people I have ever heard on a podcast. You also don't derive your comfort from the people around you, so you didn't feel the need to laugh away awkward moments. It's a great watch. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=5hUT8VZNvm8&t=3488s&pp=ygUhVGh...


I don't know left from up in this situation, but I was under the impression outgoing calls are illegal, not inbound calls.


I don't see why it would matter for an end user answering or calling. I mean, the economics matter (a business can have way more AI voices than hired people to answer calls and send calls). But the experience of the human on the other end is probably ok if the human knows for sure it's an AI they are talking to.

I certainly close all those calls and not bother to interact with them regardless. But in terms of legality I would probably be fine with a restriction and not with an outright ban. Unsure.


"Or hey, even more amusingly, a killer app could be something B2B, like enabling remote robotic work, where the worker’s commands get recorded and become training data for autonomous robotic systems. This is the core premise of my short story on AI, which I can now plug here. woohoo!"

I actually thought this is where the next big AI company would come from. A gaming company that created a game that also had a business use case. They would use the data from that game to train ML models that were capable of doing work. If someone were able crowd source some AI robot training through gaming, they would be paid by consumers and by businesses. Kind of like how captcha digitized books in the backend.


This reads like the plot of a videogame right before things go awry.


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