This is possibly one of the more cursed single sentences I've ever seen in a job posting
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Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️replied to Asta [AMP] last edited by
@aud There's that, I agree, but there's also the problem that people who don't know the problem space also don't know what solutions already exist, nor how to evaluate the fitness of a proposed solution.
That's fine as long as you stay curious and all, but that's not the VC techbro way. All of a sudden, LLMs allow them to *appear* to be competent on a wild array of different things that are *already solved*.
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Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️replied to Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️ last edited by
@aud Like, the difference between "this is a trivial problem I'd assign an undergrad," "this is a tricky problem, but solved; applying the solution takes a lot of work," "this is unsolved, but you can kind of hack around it," and "this is unsolvable, ever, as a matter of principle" is often pretty subtle and takes some training?
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Asta [AMP]replied to Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️ last edited by
@[email protected] Yeah, I suspect that's the motivation for a lot of them.
I fully admit I sent in two applications today where the subtext of my language was "This application is conditional based on the idea that you aren't just trying to shoehorn the spiky club that is an LLM where it has no business being and are actually interested in solving the problem you claim to be interested in". -
Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️replied to Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️ last edited by
- Will this program ever crash? Impossible.
- Will this program ever crash due to a memory safety violation? Difficult, but solvable.
- Does this program include any infinite loops? Impossible.
- Does this program include something from this list of common kinds of infinite loops? Trivial.
- What's the smallest convex shape that includes these points? Solved, but slightly tricky.
- How can this UPS truck take the least number of left-hand turns? I hope you have a galaxy-sized computer! -
Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️replied to Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️ last edited by
- What's the solution to this polynomial equation? Trivial.
- Does this polynomial have an integer-valued solution? *cries in agony*
- Does this list of two-variable constraints have a solution? Trivial.
- Does this list of three-variable constraints have a solution? *cries in agony*
- Does this list of two-variable constraints have an approximate solution? *cries in agony*
- Is there a solution to this conda env file? *cries in agony* -
Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️replied to Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️ last edited by
@aud Like it's just so fucking easy to take a problem in P and accidentally turn it into the halting problem!
Fucking grep did that! By adding a backreference feature that meant that a regex was no longer actually decidable in finite memory, but was undecidable in general!
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Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️replied to Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️ last edited by
@aud "Is this string a valid e-mail address?" Depends on what you mean by "string," "valid," and "e-mail address," but it's probably either trivial or *cries in agony*.
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Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️replied to Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️ last edited by
@aud (I'll stop now, I promise.)
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Asta [AMP]replied to Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️ last edited by
Does this program include any infinite loops? Impossible
is this one of these "you can't create an algorithm to solve this for any and all loops but could do it for certain cases" type problems? -
Asta [AMP]replied to Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️ last edited by
Is there a solution to this conda env file? cries in agony
lmao -
Asta [AMP]replied to Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️ last edited by
@[email protected] This reminds me of how apparently quite a few job postings have a required LinkedIn profile field and so I've had to cheekily write in
https://linkedin.com
because apparently they do some string parsing so thatlmao://nope.no
doesn't work but. -
Oh, I'm sure that'll be error-free!
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@[email protected] who needs accuracy when you've got VC money?!
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Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️replied to Asta [AMP] last edited by
@aud Basically, yeah. If you have a candidate for an algorithm that can solve the halting problem, you can turn that into an example that the algorithm can't solve.
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sentences more appealing in a job description:
We're combining my foot and your crotch to translate kinetic energy into pain
We're combining pliers and your fingernails to ||redacted||
We're combining onions and belts to translate fashion into what was the style at the time
We're combining lotion and its skin to ensure customers don't get the hose again -
Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️replied to Asta [AMP] last edited by
@aud Yeah, you can basically encode arbitrary computation in the package version constraints.... it almost never comes up in practice. Almost.
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Asta [AMP]replied to Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️ last edited by
@[email protected] ha ha suck on that algorithm
(once you pointed it out it was super obvious it was the halting problem just... you didn't literally say "lo, it is the halting problem", but I have no idea why that didn't occur to me before that?! gonna blame the headache and the election) -
@aud @CptSuperlative Famously stability is a low priority for applications running in COBOL.
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Asta [AMP]replied to Cassandra Granade 🏳️⚧️ last edited by
@[email protected] uhh
sorry, wait, what?
You can do what in a fucking conda
jesus -
@[email protected] @[email protected] COBOL? co DEEZ ball. s. balls. in... your mainframe.