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I can say they are used heavily in the construction industry for Autodesk Cloud to render drawings for field workers. Very resource intensive.

> Is there some evidence of systematic analysis of component parts?

Music theory, Nashville notation

> attempts to model elements of the problem?

Ditto

> data gathering and data analysis?

Listening to a wide variety of music and understanding what make a genre a genre

> simulation?

Cover songs, writing to a style

> Intentional application of principles of physics or some other pure domain to a real world problem?

Literally sound engineering


Iannis Xenakis?

quite the stretch

You know I tried this exact thing a few months back, sans the ESP32. You just end up writing a state machine and defining a bunch of constants anyway or the LLM just kinda gets stuck in a loop. Hm, it doesn't seem to know when to eat. I'll add a hunger variable... Etc etc until you're not even sure what you want the LLM to do.

I see. While those "claws" may look cool on the surface, I'm actually struggling to find a use case that is interesting for me. Do you guys have ideas? I already seen below the grocery shopping automation, but I will keep going at the supermarket in person for the foreseeable future.

I played with openclaw for a week and couldn't really find anything interesting to do with it. I'm in the same boat.

They probably have a newly registered domain rule.

Seems like .blog .city etc are just banned via cisco umbrella policies...

"Ok, here's a static bar on the top of the page" as it disappears as you scroll. You can now no longer click anything else on the page. You said "can't click away" and it did show up on top. As a 30 year coder that never did any UI, this is this shit I run into constantly. I can create awesomely cool and fast back end stuff, and can create better UIs than I've ever been able to, but not knowing the nomenclature trips me up constantly.

If you try it out, the prompt above correctly creates a modal dialog. LLMs are much much better than you give it credit for.

After your late 20s, that's like 90% of your pool.

Where, in Utah ?

Your experience isn't normal and I seriously question it unless there was some sort of criminal activity being investigated or there was known negligence. I worked for a decent sized MSP and have been through crytptolock scenarios.

Insurance pays as long as you aren't knowingly grossly negligent. You can even say "yes, these systems don't meet x standard and we are working on it" and be ok because you acknowledged that you were working on it.

Your boss and your bosses boss tell you "we have to do this so we don't get fucked by insurance if so and so happens" but they are either ignorant, lying, or just using that to get you to do something.

I've seen wildly out of date and unpatched systems get paid out because it was a "necessary tradeoff" between security and a hardship to the business to secure it.

I've actually never seen a claim denied and I've seen some pretty fuckin messy, outdated, unpatched legacy shit.

Bringing a system to compliance can reasonably take years. Insurance would be worthless without the "best effort" clause.


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