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I have received 168 support ticket emails in the past 30 mins, and Gmail has not yet learned to flag them as spam.

This is an absolute clown show.

Edit: whoops, this was incorrect! I had received over 1,000 Zendesk emails, 168 of which made it into my inbox.


Which NRTL did you end up using for certifications? Can you say more about that process?

oh hi ChatGPT

The giveaway is that LLMs love bulleted lists with a bolded attention-grabbing phrase to start each line. Copy-pasting directly to HN has stripped the bold formatting and bullets from the list, so the attention-grabbing phrase is fused into the next sentence, e.g. “Potential for abuse Attestation enables blacklisting”


Calling this a "giveaway" is kind of hilarious. LLMs use bulleted lists because humans have always used bulleted lists—in RFCs, design docs, and literally every tech write-up ever. Structure didn't suddenly become artificial in 2023. lol.


Yea but humans would have fixed it, this person didn't even bother. Straight copy and paste.


https://mattkeeter.com

Lots of projects, ranging from embedded systems to DIY CAD software and GPU algorithms.


The publisher describes itself as “Fusion of Researcher and AI: Independent publisher of peer-reviewed research in post-biological epistemics“

Is there any reason to believe this isn’t an AI-assisted crank publication?


> jj undo is great but it's a one time thing.

For what it's worth, this changed in v0.33.0:

> jj undo is now sequential: invoking it multiple times in sequence repeatedly undoes actions in the operation log.

(release notes: https://github.com/jj-vcs/jj/releases/tag/v0.33.0)


(I work at Oxide, though I wasn't around for the initial chip selection process)

It's at least partially a matter of timing: Oxide was picking its initial hardware in roughly 2020, and the RP2040 wasn't released until 2021.

A handful of people have done ports, e.g. https://github.com/oxidecomputer/hubris/pull/2210, but I expect to stick with STM32s for the foreseeable future – we've got a lot to do, and they're working well enough!


The LLM tics are strong in this writeup:

"No manual overrides, no exceptions."

"Our VDP isn't just a bug bounty—it's a security partnership"


Wow, you hit a nerve with that one. There have been some quick edits on the page.

Another:

> Security isn't just a checkbox for us; it's fundamental to our mission.


They delved deep and spent a whole 2 minutes with ChatGPT 4o getting those explanations and apologies in play.


That’s the part that makes me laugh. If you’re going to try to pass of ChatGPT as your own work at least pay for the good model


Hey CodeRabbit employees

> The researchers identified that Rubocop, one of our tools, was running outside our secure sandbox environment — a configuration that deviated from our standard security protocols.

This is still ultra-LLM-speak (and no, not just because of the em-dash).


A few years ago such phrases would have been candidates for a game of bullshit bingo, now all the BS has been ingested by LLMs and is being regurgitated upon us in purified form...


Absolutely. In my experience every AI startup is full of AI maximalists. They use AI for everything they can - in part because they believe in the hype, in part to keep up to date with model capabilities. They would absolutely go so far as to write such an important piece of text using an LLM.


The NFT smell completely permeates the AI "industry." Can't wait for this bubble to pop.


The server and switch hardware is designed in-house (from the PCBs on up), though we do source DRAM / SSDs / CPUs / ASICs from the usual vendors.

The "secret sauce management layer" is available at https://github.com/oxidecomputer/omicron, released under the MPLv2 license.

(I work at Oxide)


I'm not aware of folks outside the company running the whole control plane, but people have definitely gotten parts of the system running at home:

https://artemis.sh/2022/03/14/propolis-oxide-at-home-pt1.htm...

(The author of this blog post now works for Oxide!)


How much of the software stack is even possible to run without the specialized hardware? I'd also really like to try that control plane..


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