I feel like if Jobs was still alive at the dawn of AI he would definitely be doing a lot more than Apple has been - probably would have been an AI leader.
> I'm not so sure where AI would land in the turn of the millennium Apple culture.
Instead of doing almost correct email summaries Jobs would have a LLM choose color of the send button with an opaque relationship with the emotional mood of the mail you write.
> Building on theoretical work by Dietzfelbinger and Walzer [8], we propose a novel practical approach, the binary fuse filters. They are conceptually similar to xor filters, and they rely on nearly the same simple code.
Analyst slop, he's trying to say that Claude code is like the moment that chatgpt was released and everyone went apeshit for AI. The future he's describing is vaguely plausible in a narrow set of use cases a decade from now but he needs to justify the paycheck so here we are.
This writeup sounds a lot like what was happening at CaveDog - Props to Carmack / Id software for publishing the workings of Quake - Our engine AmenEngine also was directly inspired in the same way but didn't work the same in the details. It would be interesting to see how many modern engines have their roots in Quake.
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