I don’t know about that. I looked at them a couple of months back for prompt management and they were pretty behind in terms of features. Went with PromptLayer
Ohh. Reply from Shawn. I love your work.
As far as I recall, we were not looking for a net of features but specifically a git like API that could manage and version the prompts. Meta data tagging, Jinja2, release labels and easy rollback. Add that up with Rest, Typescripts and Python support and it worked pretty well. Langfuse seemed way better at tracing though.
hi! :) thanks for supporting my work. ok yea that makes sense - i was a langfuse only user but sounds like i might want to check out promptlayer (tbh i was until recently of the opinion that you should always check in your prompts into git... flipped recently)
SaaS company pivots to AI. Gets funding rebranded as AI company. Buys a company that actually knows it.
It’s still early but I question how much of these SaaS companies will continue. I’d rather connect Claude or whatever to do my task than have to learn a new platform let alone login to it.
I don’t think that is a an accurate depiction of ClickHouse. I don’t think they’re pivoting from their main data warehousing product at all. Probably making their cloud offering more competitive with other providers.
I haven’t used their product so you’re probably right. I’m biased as an AI engineer because I get contacted to help implement AI in existing platforms. While I admire the pivot the reality is what they have is already quite behind. Anything I make these days is old in about three months… You’d ideally want to start fresh and not have to worry about codebase that is years old.
You can go to https://privacy.apple.com, log in with your Apple ID, select "Request to transfer a copy of your data" and then select "iCloud photos and videos to Google Photos".
So Gemini was the most non-deterministic model of them all and now we get this one with temperature at 1 and max thinking. It’s so random that it’s hard to justify putting in my setup right now.
Everything was slower though. Turkey as a whole country had one 9600bps link to Bitnet at the time. Internet was accessed through Bitnet gateways. Systems (CPUs and I/O in general) were also much slower.
Slower and unstable. I spent a lot of my freshman year in college on Bitnet chat and iirc about every 30 minutes there would be a "netsplit" and a bunch of folks in the chat would disappear. Maybe it was our universities connection, which I think was direct to UIUC. I've posted here before that back then I thought Bitnet chat was magical. Things like being in a chat room with students in Berlin while the wall was falling felt so futuristic to me.
I am both bemused and disappointed that the top comments are all political. Kind of plays into what Billionaires like Bezos would want - the commoners bickering and not united.
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