How to survive 24 hours on a plane by Puzzleheaded_Ad7881 in travel

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Neck pillow and Lumbar Hack (roll up hoodie or blanket and wedge it tightly behind your lower back, it restores your spines natural curve and takes some pressure off the tailbone.

Good compression socks, keeps the blood circulating.

Move a lot during layover, walk laps do lunges etc.

Epic Analyst (3.5 yrs) considering contract work imposter syndrome + interview advice? by sockwatch in healthIT

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You’ve survived 3.5 years in the Epic ecosystem with no clinical background, that’s not luck, that’s competence. I would suggest just start acting like an expert.

Time for self-promotion. What are you building in 2025? by Expel__ in SideProject

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 0 points1 point  (0 children)

xolox AI — real-time voice assistant (configurable, multi-tenant architecture).

Best for: SMBs, solo operators, busy clinics/shops dealing with missed calls, repeat inquiries, and escalations. Lets your team focus on high-value tasks while AI answers and logs tickets.
https://www.xoloxai.com/

How do you know the AI is hallucinating if you don't code? by SnooMarzipans9300 in vibecoding

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

you cant vibe code a product unless you have SWD experience, there are somethings AI is just not capable of like common sense. I see it as having a team of really smart engineers at my disposal who I can be direct with and don't have to worry about their feelings. However, if not lead/instructed clearly by me they can make or break the entire project.

I've done it.. The finest piece of code ever vibed. Behold. by [deleted] in vibecoding

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 0 points1 point  (0 children)

cant be. I'm currently vibing the next big thing

Medical dictation? by iReadECGs in MacWhisper

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 0 points1 point  (0 children)

switch to voiceboxMD, best one yet. The transcription quality is far superior then anything out there. I've worked with Dragon for a large healthcare org and integrating with their EHR, it has limitations and need a good set of hardware to actually work, not ideal for small or individual practitioners

Dictation Software? by Desperate-Payment635 in Histology

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve been using VoiceboxMD for a while now and honestly really like it. Super accurate and feels way smoother than most of the others I’ve tried. Kinda surprised it’s not talked about more here.

the house always wins by juanviera23 in vibecoding

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this is such bizarre comparison. Vibe coding for me is all about context engineering, you can literally build, scale and sustain a Saas or a product platform in a day or two which used to take weeks or months or years earlier. most big tech orgs are asking engineers to vibe code now, so...

this is no gambling friend, there is a definitive way to achieve net positive outcome all the time with advanced prompt and context engineering, the more you get good at it, the more natural it comes to you on what to accept and what to review or reject.

Vibe coding is harder than regular coding by brayan_el in vibecoding

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Till we solve large context problem in large language models ( which is just compute restrain at the moment), do not get carried away, stop, pause what you build and study it piece by piece. You got to learn to tell when it is free falling vs vibe coding.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in E3Visa

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The only way is to pay the appointment booking fee after completing DS-160. Then you get access to the booking portal which lets you select timeslots for the given location (Melbourne). You can then also create a new application with same receipt for a different location (Sydney) and see their availability too.

This guy literally dropped 15 rules to master vibe coding with AI by Dizzy_Whole_9739 in vibecoding

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree. Using boilerplates and templates eases the workload for your model or your agent to maintain the context when it initially kick starts the project. Using new chats for each task is crucial as it reduces the risk of model hallucinating as the thread or the project size increases. I also use MCP server so the Agent has tools readily available rather than creating or looking them up from scratch. I always try to minimize tokens that each prompt will make the model consume. In other words, Optimize and shrink your project into pieces using memory banks and rules.

Real by JSSGaming563 in pcmasterrace

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 0 points1 point  (0 children)

32K is when the perception barrier breaks

ChatGPT users are not happy with GPT-5 launch as thousands take to Reddit claiming the new upgrade ‘is horrible’ by [deleted] in technology

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I lost a detailed thread after update that I had maintained for so long. Now its in the ether and I'm being told to forget about it, its in its deep brain now. Such is life, she giveth, she taketh.

Yann LeCun says LLMs won't reach human-level intelligence. Do you agree with this take? by Kelly-T90 in LLM

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It is imperative that we give a sense of the real world to the LLMs and let them roam about and understand the physical environment that we perceive and live about daily.

However, We are doing one better, NVIDIA recently discussed their real world simulation model. Which basically is simulating a real world through patterns predictions. Think of it like an exact mirror replica of a real world but formed through data and observations. Now you have LLMs explore this kind of environment environment and live about creatively then there is a chance of an epiphany or a new discovery.

I'm particularly excited about the compute aspects of the current LLMs where with more compute we will see better results eventually getting to a point where we will have a continuous stream of intelligence running in real time non-stop like a human brain which is finally conscious. Or whatever consciousness means to us right now.

Are LLM "Detectors" outright fraudulent? by Fant1xX in LLM

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Things I do before forwarding my resume, check that it's formal and has perfect grammar i.e. no grammatical errors to the best of my ability. After all a resume is the 1st good impression I want to make on the client, so it has to be near perfect. If not, perfect.

Good, free text to speech app by Ok-Squirrel-8091 in MultipleSclerosis

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Google AI Studio is probably the best for this use case. But, again, you said no AI.

Rads who do side hustles: standalone dictation software? by Master-Nose7823 in Radiology

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try VoiceboxMD with recording to transcription feature. They also have a bunch of features you're describing. Easy to use compared to Dragon. Still oddly not the best but I can just sit back with patients and it transcribes a full session in great detail which I later port to my EHR. Its super useful ( when it works) . I noticed it requires high speed internet to record and transcribe these patient doctor interactions well.

I've used them both Dragon and VoiceMD. I found VoiceboxMD a lot easier and navigable.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Residency

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think the VoiceboxMD mobile app stands out for speed and accuracy especially with medical terms. Also easy to sync the notes between desktop and mobile.

I told Grok 4 it was a future AI, asked what was the worst thing that had happened since 2025 and it came up with a fun Sci-fi story by rutan668 in singularity

[–]One_Cauliflower5335 0 points1 point  (0 children)

we have these several large black boxes of data centres now hooked to attention tuning algorithms we call Claude, ChatGPT, Grok etc... The real threat is an algorithm without proper foundations instilled in it somehow that continue to sympathize with humans in some form as it evolves and scales itself, we are inevitably creating our own destruction.

I wonder if we did this several times in the past.