Jason Morris

184 Followers
125 Following
559 Posts
Rules as Code guy. Lawyer, coder, Blawx dev, He/Him
@rntz Well, you wouldn't. You've already climbed the learning curve, and acquired the curse of expertise. :) You're right, of course. I think it's additionally true that functional programming has a steeper learning curve than most. That was certainly the case for me.
Hot damn. Just got access to GPT-4 over API. Not perfect timing, but sooner is better than later, so I'll take it. Lots of work to do, now.

Slightly less early preview, and now you can actually use it to make playable gamebooks!

https://sophiehoulden.com/twine/adventuretome_guide.html

AdventureTome Guide

@rntz I can't help reading this as "it's harder, but in a way I enjoy." Which is fair. For me, the puzzle I picked is interesting, and the puzzles imposed by my tools are just frustrating.

Looks like I'm going to be spending some time with the Privacy Act over the next couple of months, which is fine by me. #RulesAsCode

If you have some experience with #langchain and wouldn't mind some newbie questions, let me know. I could use some help wrapping my head around where "memory" lives, and what it's for.

Here’s a great quick start guide to getting Jupyter Notebook and Lab up and running with the Miniconda environment in WSL2 running Ubuntu. When you’re finished walking through the steps you’ll have a great data science space up and running on your Windows machine.

I am going to explain how to configure Windows 10 and Miniconda to work with Notebooks using WSL2

Source: Configuring Jupyter Notebook in Windows Subsystem Linux (WSL2) | by Cristian Saavedra Desmoineaux | Towards Data Science

#jupyter-lab #jupyter-notebook #miniconda #python #windows-subsystem-for-linux #wsl2

https://www.symphora.com/2023/07/configuring-jupyter-notebook-in-windows-subsystem-linux-wsl2-by-cristian-saavedra-desmoineaux-towards-data-science/

Saw a preview of the new #MissionImpossible movie with the kids tonight. AI goes rogue plot that doesn't actually make any sense. Painful exposition. Movie is almost 3 hours long, and the plot outline would fit on a napkin in crayon. We walked out literally not knowing the primary antagonist's motivation. Major plot points are completely unexplained except to provide opportunities for Tom Cruise to show off a stunt he wanted to do. Occasionally fun, frequently tedious.

👎🏻

⭐⭐▫️▫️▫️

@anderseknert @hrefna "Open to interpretation" isn't a roadblock. "Impossible to interpret" is. I don't know how free you are to share, but if you have examples I could look at, I'd love to dig deeper. Particularly on the non-technical user side. What was too technical, and how? Developers can build their own tools, it's the subject matter experts who need help. :)

@anderseknert @hrefna In my experience, laws and regulations when written well do tend to define their own terms more strictly than in other areas where knowledge is expressed in natural language.

The BDD approach is very similar to something I'm developing for testing or validation, too. More facts, query, response, but a similar idea.

I'm interested in what examples of nearly full IDEs you are aware of. I have seen very few apart from Oracle Policy Automation.