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Do you plan to offer a high-quality FIM models in the bundle? Would be handy to perform autocompletion locally, say via the Qwen3-coder.


Interesting! Very open to the idea. What open-source fill-in-the-middle models are good right now? I've stayed on top of the open source primary coding LLMs, but haven't been following along for the open-source FIM ones.


New Qwen3 or older Qwen2.5 in larger sizes would be great.


The age of "vibe coding" is upon us.

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Thanks for your attention. I quickly launched this website, so many details aren't well-developed yet. I'd like to know if it has potential for growth.



Thank you for your attention. This is my MVP product, which is still being refined. I launched it quickly.


Script kiddies but for applications.


...or Marshmallow, which allows one to do many complex validations in a relatively trivial manner.


On one hand, I feel like I've been in a coma since covid because I've just been coasting along with Marshmallow and jsonschema, but on the other hand it's like a lot of the major advances have been in the past couple years. Apparently pydantic got a big version update in 2023? And now all these competing static type checkers?


Pydantic got the re write in rust treatment so de/serialization is crazy fast now.


msgspec must be insanely fast then: https://jcristharif.com/msgspec/benchmarks.html

But of course unless parsing and manipulating JSON is your bottleneck, Pydantic is great, too.


It's true. msgspec has incredibly fast msgpack serialization. It's a shame so few people know about it.


JSON, too!


It says nothing about "asian people". Verbatim quote, in full:

> The contest is open to individuals or teams of individuals who are legal residents or citizens of the United States, United Kingdom, European Union, Canada, New Zealand, or Australia.


Interestingly if you follow through to the full T&C's [1], they add exclusions:

> ...not located in the following jurisdictions: Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Russia, Syria, and the following areas of Ukraine: Donetsk, Luhansk, and Crimea.

Showing that the only explicit exclusions are aimed at the usual gang of comprehensively sanctioned states.

[1] https://www.memorysafety.org/rav1d-bounty-official-rules/

Still doesn't explain why the rest of the world isn't in the inclusions list. Maybe they don't want to deal with a language barrier by sticking to the Anglosphere... plus EU?


Maybe because the laws for giving away money are complicated? There’s tax and reporting burden


Nationality, not ethnicity.

Turks are Asian. Russians are Asian. Indians are Asian. Etc.

They were probably just wondering why it's limited to Five Eyes + EU.


It'll likely be to do with financial responsibility due to where the funding comes from. They have an obligation to check that they are not sending funds to a terrorist group to solve code bounties, etc.


Then it should def be banned in america as the biggest terrorist nation on the planet


The fact that it's "backed by NVIDIA" and licensed under AGPL-3.0 makes me wonder about the cost(s) of using it in production.

Could you share any information on the pricing model?


We are open-source, so you can use and self host us for free. Our plan is to create a managed service (so long as all goes well) which shouldn't be priced any differently from other databases in the space.

We chose AGPL to make sure someone can't make a cloud hosted version of our product, think MongoDB on AWS a few years back.


I can use it for personal needs, sure. Bringing AGPL in a closed-source project is a no go for obvious reasons.


We built this to help people make software that was previously harder to make. If people want to build software and share it with everyone, they are welcome to do that for free, and if someone wants to close-source their project to make lots of money, then they can support the community they rely on by paying a license. :)


If you are on Debian, ROCm is already packaged in Debian 13 (Trixie).

llama.cpp can be built using Debian-supplied libraries with ROCm backend enabled.


Yeah, as i wrote "if you're on Debian AFAIK AMD is paying someone to experience the pain in your place" :-).

I used to use Debian at the past but when i was about to install my current OS i already had the openSUSE Tumbleweed installer in a USB so i went with that. Ultimately i just needed "a Linux" and didn't care which. I do end up building more stuff from source than when i used Debian but TBH the only time that annoyed me was with ROCm because it is broken into 2983847283 pieces, many of them have their own flags for the same stuff, some claim they allow to install them anywhere but in practice can only work via the default in "/opt", and a bunch of them have their own special snowflake build process (including one that downloads some random stuff via a script through the build process - IIRC a Gentoo packager made a bug report about it to remove the need to download stuff, but i'm not sure if it has been addressed or not).

If i was doing a fresh OS install i'd probably go with Gentoo - it packages ROCm like Debian, but AFAICT (i haven't tried it) it also provides some tools for you to make bespoke patches to packages you install that survive updates and i'd like to do some customizations on stuff i install.


From commenter's website [1], "About" section:

> living a loveless life in the dusk of decadent Western Europe

If it quacks like a duck...

[1] https://world-playground-deceit.net/about/me.html


Yes, I'm what most would call "conservative". So what? You think I love the situation Ukraine finds itself in?

I'm European and simply remember that little fact that both world wars started because of alliance networks and countries taking part in conflicts that were initially local. Which is why I try to temper the blatant war drum beating I see around.



This does not contradict what I said. Every Debian release is (and will be) an LTS release.


Can relate, try searching "s0ix battery drain".


> she kitted out her home PC with a terabyte of memory and an Nvidia processor so she could play Counter-Strike and World of Warcraft.

I wonder if anyone bothered to proofread the article.


Wired is not the publication it was 20 years ago.


Technically correct? The "M" in "NVMe" is for "memory".


Noticed that as well. And I thought my 100GB machine was beefy.


I couldn't even read the article since it's apparently paywalled. So ... well, that was 30-40 seconds I'll never get back.



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