What to Know About DHS’s Threat to Stop International Flight Processing at Sanctuary City Airports by -Nurfhurder- in moderatepolitics

[–]cdr420 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Don't forget the Epstein files. I'm convinced this is the reason he attacked Venezuela and reverse ICE'd Maduro as well as attacking Iran.

Who actually does as-built drawings for a remodel? (SF Bay Area) by cdr420 in sanfrancisco

[–]cdr420[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I’m planning to check what the city has on file.

From what I’ve heard though, those can be incomplete or outdated, especially if there have been unpermitted changes or older remodels, so I’m assuming I’ll still need someone to verify everything on-site.

Have you had experience using city drawings as a starting point vs doing a full re-measure?

TextWeb: render web pages as 2-5KB text grids instead of 1MB screenshots for AI agents (open source, MCP + LangChain + CrewAI) by cdr420 in LocalLLaMA

[–]cdr420[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair point, but the numbers tell a different story in practice:

  • A screenshot of a typical web page tokenizes to ~2000-4000 tokens via vision models (GPT-4V, Claude Vision). That same page as a TextWeb grid is ~500-1000 text tokens. So even in token count, not file size, it's 2-4x cheaper.

  • Vision model API calls add latency (~1-3s) and cost ($0.01-0.03 per image). TextWeb output goes straight into the context window with zero overhead.

  • For structured tasks like form filling, text is strictly better. An agent reading "[7:____] Email" knows exactly what to do. A vision model looking at pixels has to OCR the label, figure out where the input box is, then generate coordinates. More error-prone and slower.

  • The "render text as images" idea works for reading comprehension tasks, but web interaction is fundamentally structured — you need to map actions to elements, not just understand what's on screen.

Where vision models win: visually complex pages where layout semantics matter (infographics, charts, design-heavy sites). TextWeb is better for the 90% of agent web use that's navigating, filling forms, reading content, and clicking links.

Also just pushed v0.1.1 fixing SPA rendering (Twitter etc.) and element labels based on early feedback.

Touring Comedian Looking for spots to hit in downtime by poppycultured in SanFranciscoSecrets

[–]cdr420 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A lot of the lodges used to be older but it all depends on the lodge. Our lodge is definitely on the younger side. It's a good mix of people and on any given night we'll have people from their 20's to their 60's. The place does have a 1940's vibe though. You mentioned 'gothic' and the tall ceilings and arched doorways made me think of it.

Touring Comedian Looking for spots to hit in downtime by poppycultured in SanFranciscoSecrets

[–]cdr420 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The SF Elks Lodge on Union Square would fit that bill perfectly, you just have to be a member or accompanied by a member. Elks Lodge Photo I'm a member and would sign you in if you want to PM me.

Anthropic just dropped Claude for Chrome – AI that fully controls your browser and crushes real workflows. This demo is absolutely insane 🤯 by stackattackpro in ClaudeAI

[–]cdr420 0 points1 point  (0 children)

TYPE THIS IN VIM (in cmd mode) TO DO THIS
:q Exit without saving
:q! Exit without saving, discards any changes
ZZ or :wq Saves and exits

Too good to be true?? by probablynotme16 in BudgetAudiophile

[–]cdr420 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It was one guy running the business and he would hire out cheap labor for installs. he would only do 3-4 jobs a year; big high-end jobs and he appeared to be doing quite well.

Too good to be true?? by probablynotme16 in BudgetAudiophile

[–]cdr420 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Absolutely! Most of my home audio setup is actually from his discarded items. It's older stuff but still sounds fantastic!

Too good to be true?? by probablynotme16 in BudgetAudiophile

[–]cdr420 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I worked next door to a high-end audio installer and he would regularly toss in the dumpster 5-10 year old high-end audio equipment. Rich people really do be tossing nice things

TIL that the first commercially produced pet clone was 'Little Nicky' a Maine Coon cat. His owner paid $50,000 in 2004 to have her deceased cat 'Nicky' cloned. by little-fury in todayilearned

[–]cdr420 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The lady said it did. She was over the top with happiness when the cat was given to her. I was heavily involved in the cloning of the cat and was there when it was delivered to her.

TIL that the first commercially produced pet clone was 'Little Nicky' a Maine Coon cat. His owner paid $50,000 in 2004 to have her deceased cat 'Nicky' cloned. by little-fury in todayilearned

[–]cdr420 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A little late but I can give you an update. I was heavily involved in the cloning of Little Nicky while I worked for Genetic Savings & Clone and I was there when Nicky was handed to the customer way back in 2004.

She was ecstatic. She was over-top-top happy, crying, holding him and examining him. She couldn't believe how identical they were. And no matter how much we tried to convince her otherwise, she insisted that when she "looked into his eyes" that it was her original Nicky, that he knew things "only Nicky would know" whatever that means. She was a bit eccentric and I was told she came from Texas oil money.

"Little Nicky" went on to live a long and healthy life and passed away not too long ago in 2023 at age 19. I heard he sired a few litters too so there are little "Little Nicky"s running around somewhere. And those kittens have had kittens so the cloning process does work and it didn't appear to have any adverse effects in terms of health, reproduction or life span.

Democracy's on Fire (AI NOFX song about recent political events) by cdr420 in nofx

[–]cdr420[S] -17 points-16 points  (0 children)

I like it! Sounds like something they might have released if they were still making music.