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Or you play the same map again and have to start in a different spot, and you have the ruins of your last game on the map


You must construct additional pylons.


SESSION, the chat program that runs over the Oxen network (a Tor alternative) is much better to my mind. Voice, text, chat, all e2e encrypted and not requiring a phone number like Signal.

https://getsession.org/


I have bought several of his multicolour chakra tshirts over the years and find them very soothing to wear. Indoors.


Care to share the story or what he said to convince you not to work in videogames?


He may have been saying, "don't work on arcade games". Boon's last major arcade game was "The Grid", which was (in my opinion) a well-made game, but unfortunately it came out during the end of the arcade era. It was a very expensive cabinet at a time when arcades were dying down that pretty much marked the turning of Midway's fortunes (and the arcade industry in general).


Why stay in SWIFT when it's been demonstrated that they can be cut off from global supply on the whims of the US administration? That one decision did more for the death of the American empire than any other.


I don't think "whims" means what you think it does.


What do you think China and India think it means?


What do you think it means?


It was a joint decision, taken by the US administration, the EU council, the UK and Canada in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine -- not just something the Americans came up with.


Just restate the obvious: Russia has invaded Ukraine.


The patent system seems like it is a ripe subject for the kind of automation and disruption that we have seen lately in the legal sphere. Where you can fight your parking ticket and work within the law to defend your rights based on advice from an AI or similar system.

Has anyone done that for patents? You could have a section for proper writing of the patent, an accurate search function that runs in parallel and searches existing patents, an easy submission system that integrates with the world's patent database.


Former patent examiner here.

There have been quite a few patent drafting softwares over the years. They seem to do a reasonable job guiding someone through the process of writing the patent application. But search and submission are not automated.

Here are some softwares that are still currently on the market:

https://www.ipwatchdog.com/patent/invent-patent-system/

https://www.neustelsoftware.com/patentwizard/

http://www.lanaconsult.com/products.htm#AutoPat

AI-based patent search approaches don't work that well at the moment. I wrote about this before on HN: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31216394

AI-based patent search seems to look at citations (which is somewhat worthless as I'll look at citations anyway) and have some measure of text-based similarity. In my experience it does a poor job when the terminology varies. There was no substitute for making a search string containing a lot of synonyms.

I think AI-based patent search could see a lot of improvement in the future if it simply started looking at the drawings. As a "mechanical" examiner, many of the applications I worked on were most effectively searched by flipping through patent drawings. Sometimes the prior art I'd use to reject an application would have drawings that are remarkably similar to those of the application I'm examining. But other times (particularly involving flow or electrical circuits), the drawing is equivalent in some sense but arranged differently. A more advanced AI/ML approach is needed for those.


Thank you for the great response. Yes, I can definitely see how mechanical or physics based patents would be beyond the AI's remit at the moment. As someone who is considering going for a software patent sometime in the near future I was pretty disheartened by the patent process - both submitting the patent (the expense can be up to $500k I was told) and also defending the patent from larger companies seemed impossible. Perhaps an AI can start with easily understandable patents like software, or primarily word- or keyword based patents, and go from there to an ML approach for physics and such.


I also have been discussing this idea with others for some time and wonder how it can be exploited to break or improve the patent system. While some now try to patent things build by an AI, I think the other would be interesting: creating random claims using patent language and timestamp those. Combine this with some kind of similarity search to link the generated stuff as prior knowledge to any newly created patent application. Reinforce the generator by its ability to 'predict' patents. Use the argument that patent offices use to fend of ai patents against them: if a computer can generate the creative height cannot be sufficient...


I understand the impulse however the cost for submitting a patent is around the half-million US dollar mark (or so i have been told by patent lawyers) so I think improving the process and helping genuine innovations get some protection would be better


Maybe through prior art. If AI can reliably produce patents, it can also reliably produce prior art by the trillions, all of which can invalidate new patents.


Why use an AI when you can use a force of angry HN-ers to submit billions of ideas to bring the patent system down?


Don't forget the boys at the Oxen network and their Session program. Phenomenal work, better than Tor


> better than Tor

In what ways does it compare?

> the boys

I hope it's a much bigger world than that!


This looks really interesting. It looks like their lokinet uses an onion router though or am I misinterpreting the "better than Tor" here?


Isn't Loki the same cryptonote fork that forked signal to remove the phone requirement and then called it better than signal?


> Phenomenal work, better than Tor

Citation needed


Don't they use Mitsubishi engines across the board?


They manufacture their own. The design comes from a subsidiary.


This is the best reply here. Such compassion, but intelligent too. Well done!


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