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  1. Age verification is just a precursor to automated attribution of speech from nonogra.ph
    4 by arkhiver 17m ago | |

    Discussion (0):

    More comments needed for analysis.

  2. GLM 5.2 beats Claude in our benchmarks from semgrep.dev
    563 by jms703 10h ago | | |

    Article: 16 min

    Semgrep's benchmark reveals that GLM 5.2, an open-weight model from Zhipu AI, outperforms Claude Code with a 39% F1 score on IDOR detection, surpassing Claude Code by seven points and costing roughly $0.17 per vulnerability found.

    • GLM 5.2 is an open-weight model from Zhipu AI.
    • GLM 5.2 costs roughly $0.17 per vulnerability found, making it cost-effective for large-scale use.
    Quality:
    The article provides clear, unbiased information on the benchmark results and their implications.

    Discussion (263): 52 min

    The comment thread discusses the capabilities and usage of GLM-5.2, an open-source AI model, particularly in security research and programming tasks. Users express opinions on its performance compared to other models like Opus or Mythos, with some skepticism about benchmarking methodologies. There is also a focus on cost-effectiveness and concerns over legal restrictions related to using Chinese-developed models.

    • GLM-5.2 is a strong model for security research and programming tasks.
    • Benchmarks may not accurately reflect the capabilities of open-source LLMs compared to proprietary ones.
    Counterarguments:
    • There is a lack of trust in the benchmarks used for model comparisons.
    • Legal restrictions on using Chinese-developed models may limit their accessibility and utility.
    AI Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning
  3. Historical memory prices 1960-2026 from dam.stanford.edu
    218 by vga1 9h ago | | |

    Article: 6 min

    An interactive dataset provides historical and current memory and storage prices for DRAM, NAND flash, and HBM, along with breakdowns of accelerator costs across different components.

    • Interactive dataset with downloadable raw data
    • Price per gigabyte over time for different memory types
    • Breakdown of accelerator costs by component
    Quality:
    The dataset is comprehensive and well-sourced, with clear methodology noted in the caveats section.

    Discussion (83): 16 min

    The comment thread discusses various opinions on memory pricing trends over time, focusing on the use of a logarithmic scale and inflation's impact. Participants debate whether memory prices per GB are a useful metric and share insights into historical pricing data. The conversation is moderately intense with some disagreement but overall maintains a neutral sentiment.

    • The graph is misleading due to the use of a logarithmic scale.
    • Memory prices per GB were cheaper in 2012 when adjusted for inflation.
    Data Data Science, Data Center
  4. Better Images of AI from betterimagesofai.org
    31 by Curiositry 4h ago | | |

    Article: 2 min

    The article discusses how current stereotypes in AI imagery, such as humanoid robots and glowing brains, can hinder understanding of the technology's societal and environmental impacts. It highlights issues with setting unrealistic expectations, masking human accountability, and perpetuating historical biases. The authors propose a non-profit collaboration to create 'Better Images of AI' through research, creation, curation, and provision of alternative stock images under CC licenses.

    • Misrepresentation of AI capabilities
    • Human accountability in development
    • Historical biases in imagery
    Quality:
    The article provides a clear and balanced view on the topic, with a focus on offering solutions rather than sensationalizing issues.

    Discussion (18): 3 min

    The comment thread discusses the negative perception of AI and its impact on public trust. It also debates the effectiveness of AI mascots in promoting AI and counters arguments about AI's job displacement and rapid advancement.

    • AI is making the Internet worse
    • AI mascots are ineffective or inappropriate
    Counterarguments:
    • AI mascots could make AI seem friendly and helpful
    • AI is a technology whose defamation by CEOs will make its progress slower and more difficult
    Art Digital Arts, Creative
  5. 5k menus from the New York Public Library’s Buttolph Collection (1880-1920) from pudding.cool
    342 by xbryanx 13h ago | | |

    Discussion (87): 12 min

    The comment thread discusses the evolution of dining experiences, menu formats (printed vs QR codes), and cultural differences in food consumption. Participants share personal anecdotes, historical insights, and compare past and present lifestyles.

    • QR codes have replaced printed menus due to hygiene concerns
    • Menus from the past reflect similarities and differences in lifestyles
    Counterarguments:
    • Not all European restaurants have replaced printed menus with QR codes
    • The evolution of beer consumption tracking methods varies by country
  6. I used Claude Code to get a second opinion on my MRI from antoine.fi
    370 by engmarketer 11h ago | | |

    Article: 9 min

    The author shares their experience using Claude Code and Opus 4.8 software to analyze an MRI for a shoulder injury diagnosis, comparing the AI analysis with that provided by human doctors.

    • The author experienced pain in their right shoulder and received a diagnosis from an orthopedist.
    • The clinic suggested extensive treatment, which the author found questionable.
    • AI software flagged potential issues with the treatment plan provided by the doctors.
    • Opus 4.8 reported an intact tendon instead of a partial-thickness tear as diagnosed by human doctors.
    Quality:
    The article presents a personal experience with AI in healthcare without advocating for or against its use.

    Discussion (486): 2 hr 21 min

    The comment thread discusses various opinions on AI's capabilities, particularly in medical contexts and other professional fields. There is a consensus that while AI can provide valuable insights for non-experts or when used as a tool to learn new information, it often falls short of expert-level knowledge and can be misleading when experts are involved. The concept of 'AI psychosis' is introduced to describe the belief in AI's human-like qualities or intelligence, which some argue leads to overreliance on AI outputs without proper validation. The thread also highlights the importance of critical thinking alongside AI usage and emphasizes the need for a balanced approach that leverages AI's strengths while maintaining skepticism towards its outputs.

    • AI can be helpful for non-experts under supervision
    Counterarguments:
    • AI can be a useful tool for experts to learn new information or verify knowledge
    • The issue lies in the lack of critical thinking when relying solely on AI outputs
    • AI is not capable of human-like agency, as it merely processes data and patterns
    Healthcare Medical Diagnosis, Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare
  7. Knowledge Distillation of Black-Box Large Language Models (2024) from arxiv.org
    63 by babelfish 5h ago | | |

    Article: 2 min

    The article provides an overview of various tools, platforms, and resources related to bibliographic management, code sharing, data access, media, and demonstrations associated with academic papers. It highlights the use of these tools for enhancing research collaboration and accessibility.

    • Overview of bibliographic tools like Bibliographic Explorer, Connected Papers, Litmaps, scite.ai
    • Introduction to platforms such as alphaXiv, DagsHub, GotitPub, Huggingface, ScienceCast for code, data, and media associated with academic papers
    • Description of demonstration platforms Replicate, Spaces, TXYZ.AI

    Discussion (12):

    The comment thread discusses concerns about Chinese influence on the American AI economy, suggesting that helping China could destabilize it. There is a debate over the morality of actions taken by Chinese entities and an underlying nationalistic sentiment.

    • Chinese influence is detrimental to the US AI economy
    Counterarguments:
    • Assistance to the enemy will never improve anything
    • Epstein and his best buddy running the show
    Research Academic Tools, Data Sharing, Collaboration Platforms
  8. Deciphering Basmala from blog.plover.com
    21 by lordgrenville 4d ago | |

    Article: 14 min

    An article discussing the complexities of Arabic typesetting, focusing on the importance of ligatures and the introduction of Unicode's special codepoint for the basmala phrase.

    • The article highlights how Arabic script requires proper ligatures to maintain readability.
    • Early font engines struggled with rendering Arabic ligatures correctly, leading to poor visual results.
    • The introduction of Unicode's U+FDFD codepoint for 'basmala' allowed for a single, correctly designed glyph representing the phrase.

    Discussion (5):

    The comment thread discusses the author's enjoyment of experimenting with a single codepoint in different text entry fields, particularly on their Mac (iMessage and Chrome Omnibox), and their interest in learning Arabic.

    Computer Science Software Development, Typography
  9. AI boom risks global financial crash, warn central bankers from telegraph.co.uk
    80 by b-man 2h ago | | |

    Discussion (72): 10 min

    The comment thread discusses the potential impact of AI on the economy and labor market, with concerns about speculative bubbles, automation risks, and economic crashes. There is debate over the benefits and drawbacks of AI investments, as well as a focus on historical comparisons to previous economic crises.

    • Investments in AI may lead to economic crashes
    Counterarguments:
    • AI's impact on the economy is uncertain and may be positive
    • AI investments could stabilize or expand the economy
  10. TOP500 at ISC’26: We have a New Number 1 Supercomputer from chipsandcheese.com
    87 by rbanffy 8h ago | | |

    Article: 10 min

    The article discusses the unveiling of a new number 1 supercomputer on the TOP500 list, LineShine, in Shenzhen, China. It provides detailed specifications about the system's CPU and architecture, its performance metrics, and compares it with other notable systems like Fugaku and HPC7.

    China's growing presence in supercomputing may lead to increased investment in the US Department of Energy (DOE) systems, potentially driving more funding towards HPC research and development.
    • LineShine is a Chinese supercomputer that ranks first in the TOP500 list.
    • It features an Armv9-compliant CPU, LX2, with SVE2 and SME support.
    • The system has 304 cores running at 1.55 GHz, delivering 60.3 TFLOP/s of FP64 compute.
    • LineShine is the first Chinese submission to the TOP500 in 9 years.
    Quality:
    The article provides factual information and analysis without expressing personal opinions.

    Discussion (45): 7 min

    The comment thread discusses China's supercomputing achievement, its implications for US technology regulation and access issues, the distinction between cloud computing infrastructure and supercomputers, AI training clusters as supercomputers, and the reliability of the TOP500 list. The conversation is moderately intense with a mix of opinions and factual statements.

    • China's supercomputing achievement highlights the US's issues with technology regulation and access
    • Cloud computing infrastructure is not equivalent to a supercomputer
    • AI training clusters are considered as supercomputers due to their high computational power
    Computer Science Computer Hardware, Supercomputers
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