I also like doing that for topics that I am tangentially interested in. One minor thing that I find annoying is that the narrators switch roles in the middle of conversation. They start with the female voice explaining a concept to the male voice and suddenly they switch. In the meantime I have identified myself with the voice being explained to.
The nation is one terrorist attack away from rallying behind the president. And sadly the chances of that happening have gone up significantly in recent days.
How do you do taxes in Linux? Install a windows VM? I don't want to use the web version. With Google docs being good enough, I don't really need windows for anything else. Last time I checked, the tax software didn't run under wine.
I hope not because I’ve been doing my US taxes on Linux for 15 years.
It’s probably a specific windows desktop app, probably TurboTax by intuit, the company that lobbies to make filing your taxes hard and to destroy any free simple government app to file taxes.
So, not sure why they’d complain about not being able to help shoot their foot off but we all have preferences. :shrug:
Yes, it is the unfortunate reality of the US. You either fork over all your data to tax preparation companies on the web or pay them to use windows/MacOS software. There is still paper filing by doing taxes by hand, but that's a bit too inconvenient. Free online filing is restricted to $89k annual income.
Only if you think living longer is bad. Till early 20th century, urban life expectancy was lower than rural life expectancy in Britain. It was dubbed urban penalty.
Sometimes getting a second pair of eyes to look at the problem helps and is usually not a judgement of smartness of the first pair of eyes. Seems like it also applies to coding agents.
Indeed, I've also found that various models are good at various tasks, but I have yet been able to categorize "Model X is good at Y-class of bugs", so I end up using N models for a first pass "Find the root-cause of this issue", then once it's found, pass it along to same N models for them to attempt to solve it.
So far, which model can find/solve what is really scattered all over the place.
You are experiencing the jagged skills frontier. All models have these weird skill gaps and prompt phrasing sensitivity. This is the main problem solved by an llm-consortium. It's expensive running multiple models in parallel for the same prompt, but the time saved is worth it for gnarly problems. It fills in the gaps between models to tame the jagged frontier.
My very first use of the llm-consortium saw me feeding in it's own source code to look for bugs. It surfaced a serious bug which only one out of the three models had spotted. Lots of problems are NP-ish so parallel sampling works really well. Googles IMO gold and openais IOI gold both used parallel reasoning of some sort.
This is so true. Another thing, a model might be better at something in general, but worse if the context is too long. Looking at how GLM-4.5 is trained, on lots of short context, this may be the case for it.
GPT-5: Exceptional at abstract reasoning, planning and following the intention behind instructions. Concise and intentional. Not great at manipulating text or generating python code.
Gemini 2.5 Pro: Exceptional at manipulating text and python, not great at abstract reasoning. Verbose. Doesn't follow instructions well.
Another thing I've learned is that models work better when they work on code that they themselves generated. It's "in distribution" and more comprehensible to them.
The good old regression to the mean. Testing models as the second pair of eyes only when the first fails is going to give weird results... https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/protocol
If you choose the worst performers, a part of their failure will be due to luck and part due to skill. Letting them retry will average the luck in that sample. (So likely increase) Of course you as the tester could be very unlucky and pull a sample of people with no skill who did get a bit lucky in the first place, but it's both unlikely and... it's a funny comic.
Today physical world is largely mechanized, we rarely walk, run lift heavy things for survival. So we grow fat and weak unless we exercise. Tomorrow vast majority of us will never think, create, investigate for earning a living. So we will get dumb and dumber over time. A small minority of us will keep polishing their intellect but will never be smarter than machines just like the best athletes of today can't outrun machines.
This is surprisingly a great analogy because millions of people still run every week for their own benefit (physical and mental health, social connection, etc).
I wonder if mental exercises will move to the same category? Not necessarily a way to earn money, but something everybody does as a way of flourishing as a human.
I don't know... There are plenty of otherwise capable adults who just get home from work and watch TV. They either never, or extremely rarely, indulge in hobbies, go see a concert, or even go out to meet others. Not that TV can't be art and challenge us but lets be honest, 99% of it is not that.
More importantly, and according to your link, only Estonia rejected 50+% Indian applications, everyone else rejected less than 50%, with only 2 others anywhere near 50% (Malta and Slovenia).
So out of 29 countries in the Schengen area only 3 were anywhere near the 50% mark and all 3 are tiny countries as far as both area and populations are concerned (those 3 combined account for only 4 million people in total).
Also, just to take one of those 3, Estonia has an overall high rejection rate in comparison to all the others, and that started happening after the pandemic.
Schengen isn't "different from EU". It originally was separate from EU, but since 1999 has been an aspect of the EU. Per Wikipedia:
> Originally, the Schengen treaties and the rules adopted under them operated independently from the European Union. However, in 1999 they were incorporated into European Union law by the Amsterdam Treaty, while providing opt-outs for the only two EU member states that had remained outside the Area: Ireland and the United Kingdom (which subsequently withdrew from the EU in 2020). Schengen is now a core part of EU law, and all EU member states without an opt-out which have not already joined the Schengen Area are legally obliged to do so when technical requirements have been met. Several non-EU countries are included in the area through special association agreements.
Yes, but the inclusion of a non-EU country in an EU programme as a special exception (not unique to Schengen) doesn’t thereby make it a non-EU programme, which is a natural interpretation of what you said
I never wrote that Schengen "is not an EU programme", I pointed out succintly that the countries in Schengen and the countries in EU are not the same thing.
In fact there are also EU countries NOT in Schengen. And there are countries in Europe but not in the EU which are not in Schengen either.
I would guess that 90% of the applications were for travel, not work.
> their issuance are up to the hosting country’s policies
These countries don't even bother to apply their policies. Some cases I heard about indicate that they randomly reject applications, without reviewing them.
Ah, you’re right. The linked article doesn’t say, but apparently a Schengen Visa is “for short-term purposes, such as tourism or business trips. Work permits are apparently not counted in these numbers, then.
As to whether they are conforming tot heir own policies or not, I can’t find any evidence either way in the linked article. They’re just stating the numbers.
>Estonia, Malta and Slovenia rejected the highest percentage of Schengen visa applications from India last year, while Germany, Italy and Hungary were most accommodating.
Sounds like Estonia, Malta, and Slovenia didn't want their countries to become transits for illegal immigration from India to the UK.
Countries like Germany get legitimate Indian immigration for work and higher education so their rejection rate is lower.
[1](https://www.dhs.gov/check-wait-times)
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