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My team is asking the same. We are using jj with great success but tools like auto claude are designed around git and git worktrees. It's a shame - at least with git backend we can sort of make things work together.

I wanted the same extension but more steerable and open source, so I built open jj recently https://github.com/olup/open-jj

You gotta put screenshots in the readme!

I can't relate more. I am also prone to ophthalmic migraines and have the same tendency to not be thirsty, to the amazement of the people I usually trek or live with. Only recently (35 and a kidney stone) did I gather that I might actually be in need of water even without feelings of thirst. I have never made a connection with migraines, and that might not be it for me but reading you makes me want to pay attention.


I am a father of two, and I could not have penned that any better.


It's Counter Strike of course


Common Sense


Famous french radio program about lives and experience, like the moth meets Bourdieu. For this episode, they wrote and made the voices all in ai, relating to the Paris ai submit. The episode is used to trigger réflexions about gen ai.


On the prompt side, it's very simple, and can probably be done in a variety of ways. How we did it is to prepare a prompt with multiple "user" messages. The first one gives the instruction

you are given a reference and three candidates, which one of the candidates do you think is a match to the reference? Only output its identifier or a code when none is found

Not exactly that but something along those lines.

Then one "user" message per car (reference + candidates) with image + text indicating the type (reference or candidate) and an identifier (can be as simple as the index for the candidates).


Poster here. We would have loved that, and it was one of our first proposal - a QR code or some kind of marker. However, the client is understandably very controlling on the aesthetics of their wall as a central element of their scenography. We would have pushed for it again in the last resort, but would probably have lost the contract.


This is completely offtopic, but I would bet it was a government-funded museum. A reasonable institution would have worked with you to find an acceptable compromise, something much easier to implement with a small sacrifice of aesthetics.

Anyway, great work, and thank you for taking the time to share it!


Really? I would much less expect a government museum to be particular about aesthetics. Privately run museums/collections/exhibitions on the other hand tend to have very finicky owners -- after all, they're putting up their own money to achieve their vision, and so of course they tend to not want to compromise on how it might look.


First time for me posting this kind of story - I thought it would make an interesting case on solving a hard computer vision problem with a crafty product engineer team.


Just a small feedback… I have switched to the reader mode because the font used is very challenging to read for me.


Also, having a blog post about image detection, and not showing a single picture in the whole post was quite frustrating.


Especially given the detailed description surely the author could just generate a similar image


Just thinking that. Spend a few minutes trying to have chatgpt generate some images with Dall-E 3. Flux would probably be better to get all the specific details but ya


Thanks for sharing. Interesting approach. As other commenters mentioned, article could do well with some hypothetical images. Maybe on a follow-up blog post? Also since you mentioning your Company's name you missing an opportunity for marketing by not providing a link.


Can you tell me what font is this?


One of these:

> ui-monospace,SFMono-Regular,Menlo,Monaco,Consolas,"Liberation Mono","Courier New",monospace


The single-character-width 'fi' ligature is quite jarring in a mono-spaced font.


I just loved the wooden spirograph thing I got my 5yo daughter for Christmas (she does too, what fun). But then I thought making it an app to start exploring how those shapes work with her. And because it's 2024 I just asked an AI (here bolt.new) to build it, and refine by prompting. Thought someone else might enjoy it.


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