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I'm thinking of Debian and how much effort it takes to maintain stability and security over time.

I can't imagine we'll really be able to trust AI without it's use in open source software where we can see how reliable it is.


If AI works, imagine 10 years of security updates and possibly 10 years of full OS upgrades for Android phones.

why would they do that when they want to sell you a new phone?

With AI you can do that, or smaller companies can do that. It levels the field.

Java (incl. Scala, Closure, Groovy, Jython, etc.) is better suited to running as a server. Let agents write clean readable code and leave performance concerns to the JIT compiler. If you really want you can let agents rewrite components at runtime without losing context.

Erlang would offer similar benefits, because what we're doing with these things is more message passing than processing.

Rust is what I'd want agents writing for edge devices, things I don't want to have to monitor. Granted, our devices are edge devices to Anthropic, but they're more tightly coupled to their services.


There is literally no reason to write it in a JVM language in 2026 when better options exists. Either Go for simplicity and maintaininability or Rust to get the most out of the machine works.

Also, it'll be hard for them to lure good people to work on that thing. Absolutely no one is getting excited to write, vibe, or maintain Java.


I am not thrilled to use java, but it really does what it says on the tin. A customer copied the jar file I sent them to their as400 and it just worked. There is nothing quite like it.

Go binary says hello. No VM overhead. Everything is statically linked.

Hi go binary, unfortunately you don't exist, because there is no cross compiler for that platform. Also please don't crash if you ever do get cross compiled, since the target system doesn't understand your utf8 strings.

I bet they can already weaponize their satellites to prevent the launch of other satellites.

Putting data centers in space keeps them out of reach of humans with crowbars and hammers, which may have been a vulnerability for those robots Tesla is building.


>So it's important that there is a moment when these things aren't optional.

I haven't found anything more effective than making sure it happens fast enough other devs don't have time to think about disabling it. They might make their changes locally relying on an IDE without running the full build, which pushes the exceptions to the build agent. Developers may not have privileges to modify those builds directly, but complaints and emergencies slowly erode impediments to deploying.


Fossil fuels were cheaper too, and dilution was the solution to pollution.


> dilution was the solution to pollution

Why past tense? Dilution remains a good solution to most pollutants, carbon included. That it stops working after a point doesn't make it useless per se.


The wildlife refuge part isn't. It's managed by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service.


I expect there will eventually be enough cameras publicly streaming public spaces for anyone to be able to track any vehicle anywhere.


It really depends on the context.

Everyone's bandwidth would be saturated if no one assumed their reader knew what they were talking about, but assumption is a form of lossy compression that allows both miscommunication and misunderstanding.


Think of them like different social groups.


The unit of decentralization is the group, not the individual. The client-server relationship is still centralized.

Joining a community is a highly centralizing act. ;-p


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