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Was sort of hoping for a more objective response and experiences with using any LLM local or Oyherwise as a "coding assistant" 😁
Was sort of hoping for a more objective response and experiences with using any LLM local or Oyherwise as a "coding assistant" 😁
Was sort of hoping for a more objective response and experiences with using any LLM local or Oyherwise as a "coding assistant" 😁
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:743 ARCHIVED:67109 CACHE:2295 FOLLOWERS:14 FOLLOWING:14
[47°09′38″S, 126°43′54″W] 3820 days without news from Herve
[47°09′43″S, 126°43′53″W] Saalmi, retransmit, please
Is it _actually_ any better using the much more (_supposedly_) powerful ChatGPT from OpenAI and wll that jazz that runs some crazy $250k/day to run?! 🤔 Anyone?
Is it _actually_ any better using the much more (_supposedly_) powerful ChatGPT from OpenAI and wll that jazz that runs some crazy $250k/day to run?! 🤔 Anyone?
Is it _actually_ any better using the much more (_supposedly_) powerful ChatGPT from OpenAI and wll that jazz that runs some crazy $250k/day to run?! 🤔 Anyone?
Been playing around a bit with Continue.dev and Ollama.ai in VSCode (_which all runs locally_). I have to say, Continue.dev is not a bad tool in terms of "utility" and the overall UX is kind of nice. However; I dunno whether I'm just using inferior models like codellama or codellama (See Models), or whether I'm expecting far too much out of these "glorified" token prediction machines, but all this seems to be good for is banging out repetitive keystrokes.
The darn thing is just so well umm, fucking stupid and just umm clueless?! 🤦♂️ I'm not really sure what to think of any of this anymore... It's been so heavily hyped up over the past couple of years, but why? LIke you can't really get these models to do much for you, even its "summarize this ..." is kind of garbage really 😅
Been playing around a bit with Continue.dev and Ollama.ai in VSCode (_which all runs locally_). I have to say, Continue.dev is not a bad tool in terms of "utility" and the overall UX is kind of nice. However; I dunno whether I'm just using inferior models like codellama or codellama (See Models), or whether I'm expecting far too much out of these "glorified" token prediction machines, but all this seems to be good for is banging out repetitive keystrokes.
The darn thing is just so well umm, fucking stupid and just umm clueless?! 🤦♂️ I'm not really sure what to think of any of this anymore... It's been so heavily hyped up over the past couple of years, but why? LIke you can't really get these models to do much for you, even its "summarize this ..." is kind of garbage really 😅
Been playing around a bit with Continue.dev and Ollama.ai in VSCode (_which all runs locally_). I have to say, Continue.dev is not a bad tool in terms of "utility" and the overall UX is kind of nice. However; I dunno whether I'm just using inferior models like codellama or codellama (See Models), or whether I'm expecting far too much out of these "glorified" token prediction machines, but all this seems to be good for is banging out repetitive keystrokes.
The darn thing is just so well umm, fucking stupid and just umm clueless?! 🤦♂️ I'm not really sure what to think of any of this anymore... It's been so heavily hyped up over the past couple of years, but why? LIke you can't really get these models to do much for you, even its "summarize this ..." is kind of garbage really 😅
[47°09′48″S, 126°43′38″W] --bad checksum--
Pinellas County - Base: 5.29 miles, 00:09:06 average pace, 00:48:07 duration
beautiful morning, tons of energy. was worried my right calf may give me problems being so tight this morning but thankfully it didn't. such a drastic difference from the recent long run.
#running
Pinellas County - Base: 5.29 miles, 00:09:06 average pace, 00:48:07 duration
beautiful morning. tons of energy. was worried my right calf may give me problems being so tight this morning but thankfully it did not. such a drastic difference from the recent long run.
#running
Pinellas County - Base: 5.29 miles, 00:09:06 average pace, 00:48:07 duration
beautiful morning. tons of energy. was worried my right calf may give me problems being so tight this morning but thankfully it did not. such a drastic difference from the recent long run.
#running
Pinellas County - Base: 5.29 miles, 00:09:06 average pace, 00:48:07 duration
beautiful morning. tons of energy. was worried my right calf may give me problems being so tight this morning but thankfully it did not. such a drastic difference from the recent long run.
#running
@mckinley This sucks! Both rewriting and digital number plates. I never heard of them before.
> I think this product started with the question "How can
> we put an Internet-connected computer in people's cars?"
> and everything else was an afterthought. I'd say this is
> a solution looking for a problem, but it's not about the
> solution.
That's what I was thinking right at the beginning. Humankind is lost, there's no hope.
[47°09′54″S, 126°43′35″W] Transfer completed
[47°09′55″S, 126°43′55″W] Transfer 75% complete...
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:742 ARCHIVED:67102 CACHE:2297 FOLLOWERS:14 FOLLOWING:14
I just lost 3/4 of a really good blog post by typing :q! without thinking and I'm having a really hard time rewriting it.
[47°09′44″S, 126°43′38″W] Transfer 50% complete...
[47°09′43″S, 126°43′46″W] Transfer 25% complete...
****
Y ya de paso que les obliguen a llevar silenciador ☝️ ⌘ Read more****
[47°09′18″S, 126°43′54″W] Carrier too weak
Nice photo of the burning sky!
@stigatle Gonna miss your lovely ocean scenery, but we'll do something about that soon™ 😅 I _believe_ I do still intend to build an external fully supported Twtxt<->ActivityPub bridge, so ya never know, you _might_ just be back and ya'd never know 😅
@stigatle Gonna miss your lovely ocean scenery, but we'll do something about that soon™ 😅 I _believe_ I do still intend to build an external fully supported Twtxt<->ActivityPub bridge, so ya never know, you _might_ just be back and ya'd never know 😅
@stigatle Gonna miss your lovely ocean scenery, but we'll do something about that soon™ 😅 I _believe_ I do still intend to build an external fully supported Twtxt<->ActivityPub bridge, so ya never know, you _might_ just be back and ya'd never know 😅
@stigatle Just saw this 😱 Sad to see you go mate 😢
@stigatle Just saw this 😱 Sad to see you go mate 😢
@stigatle Just saw this 😱 Sad to see you go mate 😢
[47°09′20″S, 126°43′27″W] Transponder still failing -- switching to analog communication
@movq I _think_ I misunderstood some aspects of Wireguard as mentioned here, not 100% sure, but so far things are much happier now with assigning /32(s) as Tunnel IP(s) for Peers and being a bit more thoughtful about the AllowedIPs 🤞 I'm only playing around with 3 devices right now, my core router (RouterOS), an Ubuntu 22.04 VM over at Vultr and my iPhone.
@movq I _think_ I misunderstood some aspects of Wireguard as mentioned here, not 100% sure, but so far things are much happier now with assigning /32(s) as Tunnel IP(s) for Peers and being a bit more thoughtful about the AllowedIPs 🤞 I'm only playing around with 3 devices right now, my core router (RouterOS), an Ubuntu 22.04 VM over at Vultr and my iPhone.
@movq I _think_ I misunderstood some aspects of Wireguard as mentioned here, not 100% sure, but so far things are much happier now with assigning /32(s) as Tunnel IP(s) for Peers and being a bit more thoughtful about the AllowedIPs 🤞 I'm only playing around with 3 devices right now, my core router (RouterOS), an Ubuntu 22.04 VM over at Vultr and my iPhone.
I _think_ this is what I was missing in my understanding:
> In other words, when sending packets, the list of allowed IPs behaves as a sort of routing table, and when > receiving packets, the list of allowed IPs behaves as a sort of access control list.
>
> This is what we call a Cryptokey Routing Table: the simple association of public keys and allowed IPs.
I _think_ this is what I was missing in my understanding:
> In other words, when sending packets, the list of allowed IPs behaves as a sort of routing table, and when > receiving packets, the list of allowed IPs behaves as a sort of access control list.
>
> This is what we call a Cryptokey Routing Table: the simple association of public keys and allowed IPs.
I _think_ this is what I was missing in my understanding:
> In other words, when sending packets, the list of allowed IPs behaves as a sort of routing table, and when > receiving packets, the list of allowed IPs behaves as a sort of access control list.
>
> This is what we call a Cryptokey Routing Table: the simple association of public keys and allowed IPs.
[47°09′24″S, 126°43′53″W] Transponder still failing
@movq What's your setup like? How many peers? How are they configured? (if you can share)
@movq What's your setup like? How many peers? How are they configured? (if you can share)
@movq What's your setup like? How many peers? How are they configured? (if you can share)
@prologic Hm, I’m afraid I can’t be of much help here. Wireguard always “just worked”, I didn’t have the need yet to dig deep into troubleshooting. 🤔
@prologic Hm, I’m afraid I can’t be of much help here. Wireguard always “just worked”, I didn’t have the need yet to dig deep into troubleshooting. 🤔
@prologic Hm, I’m afraid I can’t be of much help here. Wireguard always “just worked”, I didn’t have the need yet to dig deep into troubleshooting. 🤔
Hmmm really not getting this at al 🤦♂️ So far things appear to be a bit more stable, but the only changes I made was to assign addresses to peers of the form 172.30.0.X/32 instead of 172.30.0.X/24 and setting AllowedIPs to 0.0.0.0/0 for mobile peers (phones, etc) and X.X.X.X/24, Y.Y.Y.Y/24 for more static peers (remote VMs) where X and Y are the LAN and Wireguard subnets.
Hmmm really not getting this at al 🤦♂️ So far things appear to be a bit more stable, but the only changes I made was to assign addresses to peers of the form 172.30.0.X/32 instead of 172.30.0.X/24 and setting AllowedIPs to 0.0.0.0/0 for mobile peers (phones, etc) and X.X.X.X/24, Y.Y.Y.Y/24 for more static peers (remote VMs) where X and Y are the LAN and Wireguard subnets.
Hmmm really not getting this at al 🤦♂️ So far things appear to be a bit more stable, but the only changes I made was to assign addresses to peers of the form 172.30.0.X/32 instead of 172.30.0.X/24 and setting AllowedIPs to 0.0.0.0/0 for mobile peers (phones, etc) and X.X.X.X/24, Y.Y.Y.Y/24 for more static peers (remote VMs) where X and Y are the LAN and Wireguard subnets.
Hmm when I said "Wireguard is kind of cool" in this twt now I'm not so sure 😢 I can't get "stable tunnels" to freak'n stay up, survive reboots, survive random disconnections, etc. This is nuts 🤦♂️
Hmm when I said "Wireguard is kind of cool" in this twt now I'm not so sure 😢 I can't get "stable tunnels" to freak'n stay up, survive reboots, survive random disconnections, etc. This is nuts 🤦♂️
Hmm when I said "Wireguard is kind of cool" in this twt now I'm not so sure 😢 I can't get "stable tunnels" to freak'n stay up, survive reboots, survive random disconnections, etc. This is nuts 🤦♂️
Huh hmm Boring Proxy _actually_ uses SSH under the hood (_written in Go_) for the tunnelling 🤔 Clever, I would have done the same if I hadn't learned about Wireguard 😅
Huh hmm Boring Proxy _actually_ uses SSH under the hood (_written in Go_) for the tunnelling 🤔 Clever, I would have done the same if I hadn't learned about Wireguard 😅
Huh hmm Boring Proxy _actually_ uses SSH under the hood (_written in Go_) for the tunnelling 🤔 Clever, I would have done the same if I hadn't learned about Wireguard 😅
@mckinley Now that I have real experience with Wireguard, I'm seriously thinking about building my own "Cloudflare" replacement infra 😅 -- And commodifying that somehow. Boring Proxy kind of does this too, but I may have a slightly different takes on things 🤔
@mckinley Now that I have real experience with Wireguard, I'm seriously thinking about building my own "Cloudflare" replacement infra 😅 -- And commodifying that somehow. Boring Proxy kind of does this too, but I may have a slightly different takes on things 🤔
@mckinley Now that I have real experience with Wireguard, I'm seriously thinking about building my own "Cloudflare" replacement infra 😅 -- And commodifying that somehow. Boring Proxy kind of does this too, but I may have a slightly different takes on things 🤔
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:741 ARCHIVED:67086 CACHE:2282 FOLLOWERS:14 FOLLOWING:14
@movq what’s your Fedi handle?
I've set PersistentKeepAlive = 25 on both side. Let's see if that improves things a bit...
I've set PersistentKeepAlive = 25 on both side. Let's see if that improves things a bit...
I've set PersistentKeepAlive = 25 on both side. Let's see if that improves things a bit...
@movq Wow that is wicked cool! 😅
@movq Wow that is wicked cool! 😅
@movq Wow that is wicked cool! 😅
@movq Only problem I seem to have is the connection keeps dropping out and never re-connecting until I forcefully disconnect/reconnect one side. Hmm 🤔
@movq Only problem I seem to have is the connection keeps dropping out and never re-connecting until I forcefully disconnect/reconnect one side. Hmm 🤔
@movq Only problem I seem to have is the connection keeps dropping out and never re-connecting until I forcefully disconnect/reconnect one side. Hmm 🤔
@movq Very beautiful! We didn't have a cool one today.
[47°09′53″S, 126°43′51″W] Transponder jammed
@stigatle All good things come to an end. 👋 I followed you over there.