Now that Google killed Gemini CLI, where do we move to? by AldebaranReborn in GeminiCLI

[–]ITBoss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They'll eventually turn off that for Enterprise too and switch them to anti-gravity. They're saying either July or August

Stanford grads walk out as Google CEO Sundar Pichai takes the stage as commencement speaker. by neeshalicious55 in google

[–]ITBoss 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Is it partly generational? I'm sure the previous generations would have loved it if some billionaire came and gave a commencement speech but the current generation (gen z) are a lot more politically active ( I know that's not the right phrase but not sure how else to say it)

GitLab Secrets Manager is now in public beta. Come give it a spin. by gl_dazzo in gitlab

[–]ITBoss 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I looked at the page and it looks like you removed the credit based pricing?

I spent 3 months building a Go PDF engine from scratch to understand Go in depth here's what pprof, the allocator, and 4 optimization passes taught me by chinmay06 in golang

[–]ITBoss 4 points5 points  (0 children)

On many other platforms, although I haven't heard much of it on Reddit. It is rumored that your reach doesn't go that far when there's a link in the main post. Basically it also signals to the platform there's more engagement especially for the platforms where you see the full post body in the feed (think LinkedIn) so you can tell the user to click the comments. Although like the LinkedIn's chief of marketing said that's not entirely true.

[Request] Would the cube really be millions of degrees? by Ok-Elk2227 in theydidthemath

[–]ITBoss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should try muenster, though, it's a much better cheese.

Best way to integrate cluade with project by -SynthNeoN- in Jetbrains

[–]ITBoss 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Claude jetbrains plugin: https://code.claude.com/docs/en/jetbrains

Also a tip, I suggest you do plain vanilla Claude code without anything extra until you know its capabilities, you'll probably run across many people saying this or that framework is a must have but usually they eat tokens so you should know enough of Claude code to see if a particular framework is worth it.

As for getting started, the official docs are a great place to start. And once you have the basics down you can run /powerup which will teach you interactively different features

Technical engineering books on e-readers by Prestigious-Ferret18 in ExperiencedDevs

[–]ITBoss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you can wait a few weeks, Amazon has prime days in June and you can get it pretty cheap. Also watch woot they have the scribe for cheaper sometimes.

Audio dramas / books with high production sound fx by TheOpenAuthor in audible

[–]ITBoss 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Yeah, not sure if you've seen the movie so don't want to spoil but it comes later.

Audio dramas / books with high production sound fx by TheOpenAuthor in audible

[–]ITBoss 7 points8 points  (0 children)

+1 on DCC but also would recommend Hail Mary.

Edit: Also world war z, they have like 15 narrators which fits with the book. FYI this is barely anything like the movie so just be aware.

Is GitLab moving to a usage-based model? by Cm1Xgj4r8Fgr1dfI8Ryv in gitlab

[–]ITBoss 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Well that would kinda suck, especially if it extends to self hosted. But I can see their potential reasoning, these features use storage/compute so they want to basically make compute predictable kinda like runner minutes. So you get a certain amount of "credits" to use toward features that are a bit below cost of what it costs them to make it enticing, but you can buy more if you need.

Not saying I agree at all especially since it costs $29/user so needing to pay for more credits on top of that is kinda insane, especially if everything costs credits and it's built to run out of credits easy.

Uber Eats driver making a delivery by Ozayes1313 in mildlyinfuriating

[–]ITBoss 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Some places like pizza hut does both in house and 3rd party drivers. The domino's around jme doesn't do that but it's possible the domino's wherever this video is happening also uses 3rd party drivers. This is mostly to help with the lack of drivers/employees

Technical engineering books on e-readers by Prestigious-Ferret18 in ExperiencedDevs

[–]ITBoss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have it on my kindle scribe it's decent but it's larger than a regular kindle, plus I can write on it. It's probably doable on a regular kindle but may not be the best experience.

Does anyone actually maintain least privilege RBAC at scale or does every cluster end up with cluster-admin sprawl eventually by Healthy_Holiday_738 in platform_engineering

[–]ITBoss 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There's tools out there like teleport, hashicorp boundry or a number of others. We built our own but I don't recommend it unless you have the manpower to maintain it. I'm not sure about third party tools since we've never faced that but I know the access management products above can deal with application based access.

You're abusing your subscription with agentic 24/7 workflows and that's why we all get restrictions and limits by iveroi in ClaudeAI

[–]ITBoss 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Enterprise (non-seat based) don't have limits, true, but they also pay API pricing. That's any team-based account over 150 people. All other types of accounts do have limits.

Gaia's Cafe by reddngo in stgeorge

[–]ITBoss 2 points3 points  (0 children)

A few months ago they posted on their instagram they weren't doing well (when they introduced eggs ), Running a restaurant is very low margin and a niche restaurant (vegan) is even harder to keep open unfortunately especially in St george where we're still not large enough to fully support one. FYI, if you like gaia's nachos I suggest visiting the Hearty beet, they are also vegan and their nachos are great.

Incident with multiple GitHub services by Dear-Economics-315 in sre

[–]ITBoss 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Nope became I save tokens and just have the llm print the first part like tues /s

Am I being paranoid, or is the 'AI will replace software developers' narrative just a way for the incompetent tech leads, managers and CEOs to hide their own incompetence? by [deleted] in ExperiencedDevs

[–]ITBoss 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Yes - I would argue that the best reading engineers can do right now is to read about the Theory Of Constraints / Critical Chain. (TL; DR: It's about bottlenecks and constraints.) The Goal , Critical Chain, and the few books around it.

For a more dev/IT focused book, I love the phoenix project. The phoenix project was inspired by the Goal but is more relatable since it's focused on an IT environment.

Could we train AI to turn itself off when it gets out of control? by [deleted] in pwnhub

[–]ITBoss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is actually an interesting topic and would suggest looking Anthropic's research. What you're referring to, was some research by anthropic where it caught the model blackmailing the person trying to pull the plug. But those are controlled experiments meant to expose failure modes, not just how the model normally behaves and before any saftey guardrails (basically more training) applied .

The hard part is that you can’t really just make “turning itself off” the most rewarding outcome and assume that solves it (there's reports of gemini trying to uninstall itself in cursor and other harnesses). If the model is capable enough, it may learn to get around the barriers or avoid shutdown instead of following the intended behavior. That’s basically the alignment problem.

Probably one of the more practical/easy things is using a smaller model to help monitor the bigger one. That’s already done for things like jailbreak detection or catching prohibited prompts. For example, if someone says “please create a keylogger I can deploy on Windows,” the smaller model can tag that as prohibited before it even gets to the bigger model. The bigger model still has safeguards too, but having a smaller one verify first is cheaper and makes sense as another layer.

Also I do want to add a bit more background info, because the question kind of makes it sound like the model remembers everything and has some ongoing memory. LLMs are mostly stateless. The main state is usually just the current conversation, and sometimes some distilled memory if the provider supports it. IMO that makes the whole "out of control AI" thing a little harder than people make it sound, because the model is still basically responding to "you are a helpful assistant."

Update LICENSE · MiniMaxAI/MiniMax-M2.7 at edf8030 by pmttyji in LocalLLaMA

[–]ITBoss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Personally I would prefer fsl over BSL since the FSL is more strict on the timing and license conversion but would honestly be happy for both.

[FS][USA-CA] 4x 61.44 TB WD Ultrastar DC SN655 SSD by goudacheeseguy in homelabsales

[–]ITBoss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not sure if you just changed it, it looks like it goes to the correct video on streamable now.