

One of the strengths of the too-many-approvals approach was that it made sure developers were still looking closely at every little change.
More likely it made developers immune to the approval button, instead just clicking approve blindly.


One of the strengths of the too-many-approvals approach was that it made sure developers were still looking closely at every little change.
More likely it made developers immune to the approval button, instead just clicking approve blindly.


I would say: Learn to use LLMs as a tool rather than a crutch.


That understand gamers about as much as you understand marketing. It’s about percentages. If they get some small percentage to buy the subscription, it’s a win. It matters absolutely nothing how many people are irritated by the ad.


Did you read the article at all? That is the entire point. That there are too many games relative to the number of gamers.


I’ve never seen it recommend a solution using regex. And I’ve had it provide a lot of useful code. Perhaps you need to look into prompt engineering training?

Minority Report becomes a documentary?


Try reading the question again, this time answer without hating all things LLM. OP asked if AI could be used for initial peer review, to which the answer is a big yes.


I wonder if VISA and Mastercard could be regulated in the EU as gatekeepers in the DMA


How a lot of software development ends up in real life too.

If you ban smart glasses because of the camera, then you have to ban phones and that was tried and failed in most places.
A few years ago, some venues here in Copenhagen, Denmark started banning phones, i.e. you would have to place your phone into a small, locked bag for the duration of the show and then when you left the venue, you could unlock the bag and use your phone again. I think that was perfectly allowed.


You think publishers should not be allowed to decide when they want to stop selling their goods?


Which is a rounding error in any commercial business.


Developer Unknown Worlds has shared a letter asking for patience from Subnautica fans after publisher Krafton announced the departure of its senior leadership—including studio co-founder Max McGuire—and the installation of Dead Space producer and Striking Distance (The Callisto Protocol) CEO, Steve Papoutsis, as the new studio head.
…
The letter does firmly deny that the game will be live serviceified or otherwise experience a monetization change.

Even if you turn off the setting and it stays off in subsequent updates, how can you know that the setting actually does anything at all? That is to say how can you trust Microsoft does not ignore the setting and just gathers the data always.


“Just add bots”


Article is from April 2025.


Unfortunately there are still bills to pay even if you don’t visit the site for months. Keeping the lights on is not free. So that is a very unlikely subscription model you’re describing.
That was an article without much to say. Might as well have been a tweet.