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634 points david927 | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.203s | source

What are you working on? Any new ideas that you're thinking about?
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mindcrime ◴[] No.41342492[source]
Right now I'm mostly thinking about AI. Right this minute I'm sitting in a cafe reading a book on Multi-Agent Oriented Programming with a framework called JaCaMo[1], and later tonight when I get home I'll probably spend some time getting my Fuseki[2] server loaded with some base schemas (SKOS, FOAF, etc) as I slowly start working on getting things set up to explore some ideas around integrating symbolic logic with LLM's.

And I took my new quadcopter drone out and did some flying last night for the first time. As in, my first time flying a drone, ever. The results were... predictable. Let's just say, I bought a cheap (< $100) drone for a reason. This thing will wind up destroyed. In less than an hour I managed to crash it into fences, walls, bushes, cars, dumpsters, the ground, an armadillo, Elvis Presley, a 1974 AMC Gremlin, and Nickelback. Well, more or less.

It brought to mind this famous scene[3] from the movie Days of Thunder:

Harry: I want you to go back out on that track and hit the pace car.

Cole: Hit the pace car?

Harry: Hit the pace car!

Cole: What for?

Harry: Because you hit every other god-damned thing out there and I want you to be perfect.

[1]: https://jacamo-lang.github.io/

[2]: https://jena.apache.org/documentation/fuseki2/

[3]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xll0VOsiE84

replies(3): >>41342818 #>>41343279 #>>41356853 #
1. Bognar ◴[] No.41356853[source]
I would highly recommend getting a drone simulator off Steam. You can practice the controls and drill them into your fingertips during times when you can't fly the real thing (battery recharging, night time, weather, ...). Most advanced radios allow you to hook them up to the computer so you can fly with the exact same inputs, but a console controller is also acceptable.