Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | vnjxk's commentslogin

It really seems like it is, I made this YouTube channel to do it as well

https://youtube.com/@corporatedecoder


Isn't there a math theorem programming language or something?


This is very useful! Is it cloning and running comfy under the hood? There is also Comfy serving toolkit [1] but it's mostly focused on things like discord and telegram, the http support is very minimal

---

[1]: https://github.com/matan1905/ComfyUI-Serving-Toolkit


Yes, that's it. If you have Comfy already installed, it will run off that. Otherwise, currently, you need to install it manually beforehand.


There is an api for this at https://txtrepo.com I used it with n8n to create PRs on issues


Can you explain your n8n workflow a little bit if you don't mind? txtrepo looks interesting. I had thought about somehow combining Aider with n8n/nodered to automate a few small things, but haven't looked too much into it yet.


If you have a repository, while still in it's early stages, TxtRepo.com is a good option (it can also do PRs)


This is also neat, like simpler minimal version of Fume or GPT-Engineer. It seems really useful. Good job!

Prelude is rather meant for when you are pair-programming with a chat model and find yourself pasting a lot of context to remind the model of the state of your code. I always have terminals open anyway, so having it as a CLI tool rather than needing to make requests to a server, makes sense for me.


It would be far easier to do the same things with an app and ask for a fraction of the price


People keep saying this but having to go through the Apple lock screen for every interaction would mean it never even gets used at all.

Not sure if the Rabbit device is the answer but I definitely see why people are trying.


I have the "two back tap" accessibility feature setup to start chat gpt voice. It works great. I just two back tap and look at the phone and its ready to start listening.


I tried that back tap thing, surprised how poorly it worked to be honest maybe there is a knack to it.

Thing is these AI devices will become actually interesting when they start being observers in your life too and pre-empting rather than the siri style ask and response and that just isn't possible on a locked down OS like iOS.


My really old LG android had a wake on doubletap screen. Worked really well. All newer phones have failed misserably or completely missed the function. Still miss it, was much more responsive than any new phone I bought.


And then immediately be squashed by the Apple App Store.

The answer is absolutely to do these types of products on the devices we already own. There is only one thing stopping this type of innovation and experimentation.


I know it's not a popular choice, but wouldn't a PWA on iOS work fine for Rabbit's use-case?


There’s something about eliminating the friction of calling up the assistant. For example, I’m not using Google Assistant on my iDevice because I need to go unlock the device. It’s really a system level issue.


probably done with an app for a multiplication of the revenue


Could you imagine adding additional fine to shareholders? Like a reverse dividend? I wonder what disasters or blesses this will cause


Fining shareholders would effectively force unlimited liability to shareholders, which comes with a bunch of negatives (ex: bigger shareholders would just own inside of an LLC wrapper).

Wouldn't fining more accomplish the same goal? If it was big enough, it would cause major drawdowns in the stock price, which would cause financial losses for the shareholders.


No. That would destroy the stock markets in an instant. The way it has always been is that with a classic stock, the only risk an investor has is the money they paid someone to acquire the stock.

There exist other classes with actual post-buy liabilities, e.g. stock options, as one particularly unlucky poor sod discovered at the start of the 2020 plaguefest [1], but normally these are (supposed to be) heavily gated for actually qualified investors for precisely that reason.

Personally, I'd keep it that way... and nationalize companies that can't pay their fees, without paying out the shareholders. That way, the shareholders get punished, the jobs created by the company aren't lost, and the government gains something of value.

[1] https://www.forbes.com/sites/sergeiklebnikov/2020/06/17/20-y...


To be clear -- the stocks are not the potential liability.

You're talking about situations where people are borrowing shares and selling them, with the hope of buying the share back later to pay back the borrowed share. Obviously that's a bad scene if you borrow / sell the share and then it goes from $20 to $20,000,000,000.... Your liability in these scenarios is infinite, but it is also part of the trading system to manage those exploding liabilities.

If you buy a property, and it turns out that property is a former toxic waste dump, you own that liability from that asset. What you thought would make a wonderful daycare is now going to cost you millions to remediate.

If you buy into a partnership, and one of the other partners does a silly thing and now the partnership owes someone millions, you're on the hook for that.

If you buy a stock, your liability is the money you've invested in the stock, which is why stocks are such a wonderful innovation (as seen from a 1400's perspective where debts are paid back by all owners).


Our entire western society depends on the ability to own and run businesses without personal responsibility for what the business does as an organisation. Sometimes in the case of fraud, or similar individual crimes within an organisation can be placed as blame on individuals or even management found to wilfully ignore internal warnings and so on, but on the whole, it’s rare that we go after private persons for what the organisations where they work does.

Shareholders are even further detached from this process, often having very little knowledge of what happens within organisations. Often having no influence on what happens within organisations. You likely own stock yourself through your pension funds, and if you made these laws your pension would be fined for what the index fonds it invest in does.

I guess from some political points of views all of this would be a good thing based on our current inequality in society, but the way to solve this isn’t through collective punishment. It’s through taxation. Right now, the entire economy is very much geared in favour of increasing the inequality by transferring more and more wealth to those who already have it. It hasn’t always been like this, 50 years ago, before the age of new public management, the taxation on things like wealth, stock and so on were high and the wealthy in our society paid most 80% of their total (not income tax) wealth generation. Today it’s often less than 10-20% through various tax law loop holes, and that’s if you keep your wealth generation absolutely legal.

Af far as organisation fines go, the situation is sort of similar to the general economy, in that major organisations and wealth owners have “rigged” the system in ways where it’s very hard to punish major corporations on a global scale. In Denmark we might find Facebook or Google guilty of something and fine them up to 10% of their income, but its income in Denmark, which is frankly so small on the global scale that they often don’t even bother fighting it in our courts like they do with the larger EU rulings. This could change, but it’s hard to do so, as the US isn’t interested in forcing US non-token companies fines to foreign countries. Similarly it would seem that even within the US there is competition between the various states to be the most company friendly.


That actually sounds like a remarkably elegant way to do it. We'll never know what the second order consequences could be until we try it. But I doubt they'll be as bad as what we're experiencing now.


Shareholders of large public companies have limited ability to challenge the actions of directors, as proxy fights are in a majority of cases unsuccessful and shareholder lawsuits are also difficult as courts such as the Delaware Chancery are generally highly deferential applying the business judgement rule. For optimal effect, if non-corporate liability desired, suggest liability attach to directors and officers first instead.


Hmm, could we apply a fine to share. Either as fixed amount or percentage at time it is transacted on next time. Basically make them partially non-fungible...

So fine is applied at end of some day. Now all shares are marked. And when they are sold next time this fine is paid.


Because as a shareholder, I have zero influence on whether or not the company violates laws?


Your shares can have voting rights. And it is up to you to utilize them. Or choose a way to invest that they are correctly utilized.


So, I hold, I am super rich you know, 10% of Airbus. Now Airbus is fined billions by authorities for violating export control laws, engaged in bribery and other stuff. Some that was done by local sales entities. How exactly can I, even as one of the biggest shareholders, influence those operational daily decisions?

Also, you are aware of the idea of having limited liability companies?


Yes, your liability would be limited to whatever is the value of that 10%. Own a company that does bad enough thing, lose the whole holding in the company.

You could participate in electing a board. That elects CEO and other C-level that spend all their waking hours ensuring that no one in company breaks rules. I think that is absolutely reasonable thing to ask, specially with pay they are getting.


Wow, that is a very interesting take on how limited liability and public companies work...

One corner stone of free societies is private ownership of enterprises. And that comes with the idea of shielding investors and owners from certain decisions of the comoany, which is a legal person apart from the legal person of the investor / owner...


Let's say company has stock price of 100. Then it kills million people. Court decides to set fine of 99%. Now the stock price stays the same, but next time holder of share sells it 99% of price goes as fine to society.

Their liability is limited to that 100. Just that next time they transact on the share they entirely justly lose most of it. As they did horrific job in controlling their property.


So you propose punishing people whom have nothing to do with the crime? Interesting take on the rule of law, to say the least.


They owned the company that did the crime. They lose the company. Seems entirely fair for funding the crime...


That's not even how criminal law works... If I borrow money to someone, that someone buys a gun with that money to rob a bank, I am, rightfully, not guilty of bank robbery or any other crime. Unless I borrowed the money knowing I funded a bank robbery, in which case I would be a co-conspirator. As a simple share owner, I am far from that. Heck, even as a majority shareholder I am far from that.

And by the way, if I am a memeber of the board and my management and I engange in anti-trust violations together, I am legally and criminally liable already under existing law. If I am a member of the board, and my management does something illegal without my knowledge, I am off the hook as well (again rightly so). If I engage in a cover up, well, then things change again (and again rightly so).

Some people have weird ideas about the rule of law is supposed to work in a democracy.


Where do you think the money comes from? The organization has some money they can either use for stock buybacks or fines. Money that goes to fines necessarily does not go to buybacks or dividends


This SHOULD be the way as they are the ones who stand to gain the most. They should be the ones who lose the most if the actions of their responsibilities are nefarious.


Isn’t the share price getting decimated the punishment for shareholders?


That would be but the miniscule fines don't have any effect on the share price ?


It would make it incredibly risky to be a non-management shareholder.


But in turn it would incentivize some better practices to avoid risks of fines.. It wouldn't be risky if companies didn't act maliciously and ignore regulations etc.


In my opinion, the dev role will slowly shift towards debugging and writing logic-heavy code.


look up "open assistant"



its mass-borrowing


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: