Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!


Shells Virtual Desktop
BMail.ag - Secure Email Service
Server.net
CPLicense.net
VPS Server
Buy VPN
Vultr
VMs for AI
HostDare
ReliableSite White-Label Dedicated Hosting for Resellers
InterServer VPS
BMail.ag - Secure Email Service
Best VPN
High-Performance Bare Metal Server Solutions
Karvl.com
Server Mania Cloud Hosting
DataWagon Hosting
AlphaVPS Hosting
Evoxt.com
Clouvider
VPS Hosting with NVMe
Residential IPs in the US & 4G Mobile Proxies in EU & US with Unlimited Bandwidth
ReliableSite White-Label Dedicated Hosting for Resellers
Rabisu - Hosting Solutions
Shells Virtual Desktop
New on LowEndTalk? Please Register and read our Community Rules.

All new Registrations are manually reviewed and approved, so a short delay after registration may occur before your account becomes active.

[Technical Showcase] Decoupling Metadata & Streams: A Serverless Media Architecture via Cloudflare

2»

Comments

  • emghemgh Member, Megathread Squad

    @totally_not_banned said:

    @emgh said:
    seriously it does give a rush

    Actually some kind of dopamine release due to the feeling of having archived something probably really isn't far fetched and being able to trigger it at the push of a button could lead to repetitive behavior. Who knows maybe a couple years down the road we will see some kind of LLM Anonymous groups? :D

    early days when chatgpt was really stupid i was sometimes finding myself going at it over and over to fix some issue i could have fixed in 3 minutes myself

    i often noticed like "wait why am i doing this i can just fix it"

  • bro pause the llm for one second damn

    Fair enough. Since English isn't my native language, I usually read your comments through a translator, write down my thoughts in my own language, and then use an LLM to output the final English response to make sure my points are clear.

    The content is 100% my own—the AI is just my "translator" to bridge the gap. I'm focusing on the code and the architecture, but I'll try to keep the "AI vibe" under control!

  • edited May 9

    Sorry but i'll just be blunt here: If you aren't capable of reading/writing English your technical understanding is with almost 100% certainty dogshit. There's slight exceptions to this rule when it comes to Russian/Chinese as they have a ton of native resources and even there lack of English skills is a massive drawback.

    Besides not my native language is such a lame and lazy excuse. Like probably 50% of LET doesn't speak English natively and people manage. I mean, i have for the most part accepted that this whole AI thing will push people to the forefront who never got anywhere because they simply weren't willing to put in any kind of effort but being unwilling to even form a couple coherent sentences in English is pretty much a new low.

    Look, i won't give you too much shit for puking out code you don't understand based on systems you don't understand running on hardware you understand even less but Jesus Christ a handful of sentences in English...

    Thanked by 2oloke TrikeLike
  • forestforest Member

    @serverlesscore said:

    bro pause the llm for one second damn

    Fair enough. Since English isn't my native language, I usually read your comments through a translator, write down my thoughts in my own language, and then use an LLM to output the final English response to make sure my points are clear.

    The content is 100% my own—the AI is just my "translator" to bridge the gap. I'm focusing on the code and the architecture, but I'll try to keep the "AI vibe" under control!

    Please use DeepL or Google Translate instead. You may not notice because you aren't a native speaker, but LLM "translations" change your tone and sometimes even the meaning of what you write in subtle ways.

    Thanked by 1TrikeLike
  • edited May 9

    @totally_not_banned said:
    Sorry but i'll just be blunt here: If you aren't capable of reading/writing English your technical understanding is with almost 100% certainty dogshit. There's slight exceptions to this rule when it comes to Russian/Chinese as they have a ton of native resources and even there lack of English skills is a massive drawback.

    Besides not my native language is such a lame and lazy excuse. Like probably 50% of LET doesn't speak English natively and people manage. I mean, i have for the most part accepted that this whole AI thing will push people to the forefront who never got anywhere because they simply weren't willing to put in any kind of effort but being unwilling to even form a couple coherent sentences in English is pretty much a new low.

    Look, i won't give you too much shit for puking out code you don't understand based on systems you don't understand running on hardware you understand even less but Jesus Christ a handful of sentences in English...

    Don't you think you're being a bit rude? It's not that I can't speak English, it's just that I'm not good at writing long passages without assistance. I have no problem reading English documents. I work for a major internet company in China, and my after-tax salary is close to $8,000 a month. I just don't want to be bound and evaluated by the rules of a big company anymore, so I want to do a personal project. Then, in the second half of my life, I can travel the world and write poetry. Go look at the bullshit you're talking about. Apart from the cost of Vibe Coding, all my hardware investment is two cloud storage memberships, totaling $10. I can support 200 users simultaneously selecting and viewing content from 16,000 JAV files.

    Please visit https://ivibe.fans.

    Although it's not completely finished yet, it already supports watching 16,000 JAV files without any problems.

  • forestforest Member

    @serverlesscore said: It's not that I can't speak English, it's just that I'm not good at writing long passages without assistance. I

    Honestly, even imperfect English is better than LLM "translations". LLMs paraphrase and reword everything you say. It happens so often that people here get understandably frustrated when everyone using one to translate sounds the same. LLMs often change what you write so that it sounds more condescending too.

  • Honestly, even imperfect English is better than LLM "translations". LLMs paraphrase and reword everything you say. It happens so often that people here get understandably frustrated when everyone using one to translate sounds the same. LLMs often change what you write so that it sounds more condescending too.

    I've learned something, thank you for your suggestion. I guess I was just too lazy. Actually, communication is just as important as the technical architecture and implementation, since I still need to promote it in the end.

    Thanked by 3forest oloke emgh
  • edited May 9

    @serverlesscore said:

    @totally_not_banned said:
    Sorry but i'll just be blunt here: If you aren't capable of reading/writing English your technical understanding is with almost 100% certainty dogshit. There's slight exceptions to this rule when it comes to Russian/Chinese as they have a ton of native resources and even there lack of English skills is a massive drawback.

    Besides not my native language is such a lame and lazy excuse. Like probably 50% of LET doesn't speak English natively and people manage. I mean, i have for the most part accepted that this whole AI thing will push people to the forefront who never got anywhere because they simply weren't willing to put in any kind of effort but being unwilling to even form a couple coherent sentences in English is pretty much a new low.

    Look, i won't give you too much shit for puking out code you don't understand based on systems you don't understand running on hardware you understand even less but Jesus Christ a handful of sentences in English...

    Don't you think you're being a bit rude? It's not that I can't speak English, it's just that I'm not good at writing long passages without assistance.

    Blunt yes, rude no.

    I have no problem reading English documents. I work for a major internet company in China, and my after-tax salary is close to $8,000 a month. I just don't want to be bound and evaluated by the rules of a big company anymore, so I want to do a personal project.

    Well, then you are somewhat covered by Chinese exception, i guess. What your income, position or how this is a personal project has to do with anything is beyond me though.

    Then, in the second half of my life, I can travel the world and write poetry.

    Cool.

    Go look at the bullshit you're talking about. Apart from the cost of Vibe Coding, all my hardware investment is two cloud storage memberships, totaling $10.

    Cool.

    I can support 200 users simultaneously selecting and viewing content from 16,000 JAV files. Please visit ivibe.fans. Although it's not completely finished yet, it already supports watching 16,000 JAV files without any problems.

    Again cool. Yet none of this has anything to do with the actual topic.

    I mean, do you think people were just born being able to write structured texts? No, it took time. They start small and improve. The reason behind this is not even so much to look fancy or anthing but the way one addresses people shows how much value one attributes to them.

    A clean and orderly writing style is a form of respect to the person being addressed and that especially happens due to the effort that is being invested (during actual writing and the learning process that lead to it). So just skipping the whole effort part is on one hand pretty much a form of disrespect and on the other hand a demonstration of i-can't-be-arsed laziness.

    Laziness is the enemy of understanding complex topics. Pretty much as with writing understanding complex topics takes time. Sure, modern technologies make it possible to jump straight to the end result and in a lot of ways that will suffice but the skipped part is not simply pure filler. It is where a lot of understanding/learning usually happens.

    I won't claim to know much of anything about your project (i certainly don't), so maybe i am overestimating things here but on average it will be tough to work out the actual logic behind the overall functioning of a semi-complex project written by another human (on a line by line basis), so unless the generated code amounts to something quite simple (in which case i would question the advantage of generating it over doing it by hand and actually controlling the nuances) chances are you wouldn't know the details and couldn't explain them.

    Look, you mostly care for the end result and that is fine for what it is (i wish you the best of luck) but don't expect me to get excited. I actually love programming - as in the act of solving problems down to the most tiny detail, which might very well involve a bunch of machine language (when i am really having fun at least) - and while a nice end result is great and all i am personally going to mostly care about the details (which are pretty much out of scope when they were just thrown together by an algorithm).

  • Look, you mostly care for the end result and that is fine for what it is but don't expect me to get excited. I actually love programming - as in the act of solving problems down to the most tiny detail, which might very well involve a bunch of machine language - and while a nice end result is great and all i am personally going to mostly care about the details (which are pretty much out of scope when they were just thrown together by an algorithm).

    Yes, in China, efficiency is prioritized, and I apologize for my previous laziness with LLM.

    Like with my ivibefans project, I meticulously refined and optimized the user experience, including how to quickly activate the poster wall for 16,000 JAVs, how to ensure video playback started within 5 seconds of a user clicking on Infuse, and how to redirect to other cloud storage services after a failure. However, my own backend management module was very sloppy.

    I focused more on the user experience of the system itself, neglecting the user experience of communication.

    Going forward, I will slow down and refine both the system and communication. I am confident that this project will eventually give me time freedom, a stable passive income, and the opportunity to travel the world and write poetry.

    Thanked by 2forest TrikeLike
  • TrikeLikeTrikeLike Member

    @serverlesscore said:
    ...this project will eventually give me time freedom, a stable passive income, and the opportunity to travel the world and write poetry.

    When your gooning-CDN-as-a-SaaS site finally takes off, you'll have time sufficient to write epic poetry to chronicle your great business exploits. Perhaps it'll look something like this:

    liberated at long last!
    sound of choking lubed chickens
    and shuffling of coin.

    Thanked by 2forest TimboJones
  • @serverlesscore said:

    Look, you mostly care for the end result and that is fine for what it is but don't expect me to get excited. I actually love programming - as in the act of solving problems down to the most tiny detail, which might very well involve a bunch of machine language - and while a nice end result is great and all i am personally going to mostly care about the details (which are pretty much out of scope when they were just thrown together by an algorithm).

    Yes, in China, efficiency is prioritized

    I don't think this applies only to China. In general i'd say you are probably just the new generation. At first a huge part of development became centered around frameworks and web technologies, now large chunks are made to magically appear. I was pretty much already a dinosaur before the appearance of AI.

    Like with my ivibefans project, I meticulously refined and optimized the user experience, including how to quickly activate the poster wall for 16,000 JAVs, how to ensure video playback started within 5 seconds of a user clicking on Infuse, and how to redirect to other cloud storage services after a failure. However, my own backend management module was very sloppy.

    I focused more on the user experience of the system itself, neglecting the user experience of communication.

    Going forward, I will slow down and refine both the system and communication. I am confident that this project will eventually give me time freedom, a stable passive income, and the opportunity to travel the world and write poetry.

    Sounds good even if i have very little idea what it is about. As long as there is details involved its fine in my book ;)

    I will not bother you any further. Good luck with your project!

  • When your gooning-CDN-as-a-SaaS site finally takes off, you'll have time sufficient to write epic poetry to chronicle your great business exploits. Perhaps it'll look something like this:

    liberated at long last!
    sound of choking lubed chickens
    and shuffling of coin.

    Yes, my income in China is already in the top 1%, but I hate being scrutinized and evaluated, and I hate working from 9 am to 9 pm every day.

    I've almost never seen the sunrise or sunset because I spend my rest time sleeping to recharge. However, I need the high income from this job to maintain a decent life.

    Moreover, the development of AI makes me feel that I can't do this job for much longer. If I were to switch careers, I only want to be a top-tier independent developer. In the AI ​​era, any functional program will be quickly copied because there are no barriers to entry.

    That's why I chose this project: creating a protocol called "ivibefans" and then providing services to others, similar to Surge and Infuse. I consider them benchmarks for independent developers, and I hope to achieve true freedom through technology, just like them.

    Thanked by 2TrikeLike forest
  • so.... who will store the files?

  • TimboJonesTimboJones Member

    @serverlesscore said:
    I've almost never seen the sunrise or sunset because I spend my rest time sleeping to recharge. However, I need the high income from this job to maintain a decent life.

    This won't end well.

    Thanked by 1forest
  • TimboJonesTimboJones Member

    @itachikonoha said:
    so.... who will store the files?

    Filesharing sites that support torrent to link downloading.

Sign In or Register to comment.