I think this kind of thing is a pretty strong argument for the entire open source model ecosystem, not just open weights but open data and the whole gamut.
It would be really cool if it was able to render Wikipedia correctly, I really like the idea of a browser with minimal dependencies having the ability to navigate most static websites, this one for now compiles instantly and it's incredibly small.
Yeah, my mind battled with what websites to use as examples for adding support, Wikipedia should have been an obvious one, that's on me!
You're not the only one to say this, maybe there is a value in a minimal HTML+CSS browser that still works with the modern (non-JS using) web, although I'm not sure how much.
Another idea I had, was to pile another experiment on top of this one, more about "N humans + N agents = one browser", in a collaborative fashion, lets see if that ends up happening :)
Maybe you can divide the task into verifiable environments like an HTML5 parser environment where an agent is going to build the parser and also check the progress against a test suites (the https://github.com/html5lib/html5lib-tests in this case) and then write the API into a .md, the job of the human is going to be at the beginning to create the various environments where the agents are going to build the components from (and also how much it can be divided into standalone components).
Thanks for the ideas, but I'll leave the torch for someone to pickup, the goal was to get as far as possible within 3 days, and with human steering, so I'm stopping here personally :)
I'll keep them in mind for the future, who knows, maybe some interesting iteration could be done on what's been made so far.
I don't like promoting gore websites but in watchpeopledie and search Iran you can count yourself at least hundreds of body from all the videos, often in a single location, usually the aftermath.
A friend of mine (from Iran) managed to send me a few messages on January 18th via Telegram (Telegram is very popular in Iran) when the situation was though to be resolving and then nothing, blackout again.
And even when the blackout was not present, my friend had to used some complex V2Ray server (in Iran) to another server (in Germany) to connect and it was shared by other people, so if he cannot connect probably 99% of other people in his area cannot also connect outside.
>This is true by definition as the QuickJS vulnerability was previously unknown until I found it (or, more correctly: my Opus 4.5 vulnerability discovery agent found it).
"This is true by definition as the QuickJS vulnerability was previously unknown until I found it (or, more correctly: my Opus 4.5 vulnerability discovery agent found it)."
Makes little difference, whoever or whatever finds the initial exploit will also do the busywork of working around mitigations. (Techniques to work around mitigations are initially not busywork, but as soon as somehow has found a working principle, it seems to me that it becomes busywork)
After setting the environment and the verifier you can spawn as many agents as you want until the conditions are met, this is only possible because they run without human assistance, that's the "industrialisation".
I love that everyone is making their own TTS model as they are not as expensive as many other models to train. Also there are plenty of different architecture.
> ... associated with the death in police custody of Mahsa Amini began on 16 September 2022 and carried on into 2023, but by spring 2023, the protests had largely subsided ...
> At least 551 people had been killed as of 15 September 2023, according to Iran Human Rights, including women and at least 68 minors.
If you disagree on something you can also train a lora.
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