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ASCII characters are not pixels: a deep dive into ASCII rendering

https://alexharri.com/blog/ascii-rendering
842•alexharri•15h ago•105 comments

A programming language based on grammatical cases of Turkish

https://github.com/kip-dili/kip
130•nhatcher•6h ago•45 comments

MIT's Computer Systems Security (2024)

https://css.csail.mit.edu/6.858/2024/
25•barishnamazov•2h ago•2 comments

Xous Operating System

https://xous.dev/
83•eustoria•3d ago•25 comments

We put Claude Code in Rollercoaster Tycoon

https://labs.ramp.com/rct
369•iamwil•5d ago•217 comments

If you put Apple icons in reverse it looks like someone getting good at design

https://www.threads.com/@heliographe.studio/post/DTeOwAykwQ1
222•lateforwork•3h ago•109 comments

The recurring dream of replacing developers

https://www.caimito.net/en/blog/2025/12/07/the-recurring-dream-of-replacing-developers.html
302•glimshe•12h ago•250 comments

Show HN: ChunkHound, a local-first tool for understanding large codebases

https://github.com/chunkhound/chunkhound
51•NadavBenItzhak•5h ago•9 comments

Raising money fucked me up

https://blog.yakkomajuri.com/blog/raising-money-fucked-me-up
138•yakkomajuri•8h ago•42 comments

Light Mode InFFFFFFlation

https://willhbr.net/2025/10/20/light-mode-infffffflation/
154•Fudgel•4h ago•118 comments

The Olivetti Company

https://www.abortretry.fail/p/the-olivetti-company
142•rbanffy•6d ago•27 comments

An Elizabethan mansion's secrets for staying warm

https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20260116-an-elizabethan-mansions-secrets-for-staying-warm
119•Tachyooon•10h ago•142 comments

Below the Surface: Archeological Finds from the Amsterdam Noord/Zuid Metro Line

https://belowthesurface.amsterdam/en/vondsten
62•stefanvdw1•6d ago•9 comments

M8SBC-486 (Homebrew 486 computer)

https://maniek86.xyz/projects/m8sbc_486.php
92•rasz•6d ago•8 comments

The thing that brought me joy

https://www.stephenlewis.me/blog/the-thing-that-brought-me-joy/
67•monooso•8h ago•27 comments

Counterfactual evaluation for recommendation systems

https://eugeneyan.com/writing/counterfactual-evaluation/
64•kurinikku•21h ago•6 comments

IRISC: An ARMv7 assembly interpreter and computer architecture simulator

https://polysoftit.co.uk/irisc-web/
13•rtybanana•2h ago•1 comments

How London cracked mobile phone coverage on the Underground

https://www.ianvisits.co.uk/articles/how-london-finally-cracked-mobile-phone-coverage-on-the-unde...
10•beardyw•4d ago•2 comments

There's no single best way to store information

https://www.quantamagazine.org/why-theres-no-single-best-way-to-store-information-20260116/
79•7777777phil•10h ago•43 comments

Show HN: Speed Miners – A tiny RTS resource mini-game

https://speedminers.fun/
5•nickponline•5h ago•0 comments

What twenty years of DevOps has failed to do

https://www.honeycomb.io/blog/you-had-one-job-why-twenty-years-of-devops-has-failed-to-do-it
42•mooreds•7h ago•81 comments

The Resonant Computing Manifesto

https://resonantcomputing.org/
46•sinak•10h ago•15 comments

The 600-year-old origins of the word 'hello'

https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20260113-hello-hiya-aloha-what-our-greetings-reveal
91•1659447091•15h ago•63 comments

Map To Poster – Create Art of your favourite city

https://github.com/originalankur/maptoposter
228•originalankur•16h ago•58 comments

What are Tithe Maps (2021)

https://mapreading.co.uk/what-are-tithe-maps/
16•thomasjb•5d ago•2 comments

ClickHouse acquires Langfuse

https://langfuse.com/blog/joining-clickhouse
197•tin7in•17h ago•91 comments

The Dilbert Afterlife

https://www.astralcodexten.com/p/the-dilbert-afterlife
456•rendall•1d ago•301 comments

A New Era for FIRST LEGO League: Inspiring the Next Generation of Learners

https://community.firstinspires.org/new-era-first-lego-league-future-edition
9•jchin•5d ago•1 comments

6-Day and IP Address Certificates Are Generally Available

https://letsencrypt.org/2026/01/15/6day-and-ip-general-availability
490•jaas•1d ago•271 comments

Show HN: Streaming gigabyte medical images from S3 without downloading them

https://github.com/PABannier/WSIStreamer
138•el_pa_b•18h ago•44 comments
Open in hackernews

Is-even-ai – Check if a number is even using the power of AI

https://www.npmjs.com/package/is-even-ai
301•modinfo•8mo ago

Comments

parpfish•8mo ago
Use this to add AI to your product to appease management.

Next week, “refactor” it out and brag to manager about cost savings and performance boosts, don’t mention “removing the AI”.

lrvick•8mo ago
NPM packages can never be removed once added to a codebase. You can only add more.
freetime2•8mo ago
Boss: What have you been working on for the last quarter?

Me: I leveraged Deep Intelligence to build a Next-Gen Parity Classifier with 99.9% accuracy.

rthnbgrredf•8mo ago
Smart Boss: And what did you actually do?
joshka•8mo ago
Can we get a leftpad-ai please?
fooker•8mo ago
Ahem secure-left-ai-405b-quantized.
mrits•8mo ago
This works great for situations where you can’t trust traditional intelligence. Thank you for your contribution
jeron•8mo ago
why stop there? let's get an is-true-ai that checks if a boolean is true using AI
jsheard•8mo ago
@grok is this truthy?
VladVladikoff•8mo ago
False
hnburnsy•8mo ago
Found the Grok imposter, Grok would give a three paragraph answer.
danillonunes•8mo ago
False, but you know what is true? White genocide!
atum47•8mo ago
I remember when the whole isEven package was ridiculed for the first time a while ago, back then I thought about training a NN to predict the odds of a number being even, as a joke. I don't actually remember if I actually wrote code for it, but in the end I thought no one would laugh and gave up
ksherlock•8mo ago
When I watched Andrej Karpathy's NN videos a year or two back, I trained a Neural Network to multiply an integer by two. This was with a rather small training set but if you rounded the results (which was a floating point), they were mostly correct. For positive numbers. My training data didn't include any negative numbers so they were hilariously bad.
sodra9000•8mo ago
This package should be updated to use the newer gpt-4o-mini model, rather than gpt-3.5-turbo.

Its 3x cheaper, twice as fast, and supports cached input just in case you need to double check if the last number you entered was even. It also has a knowledge cutoff of September 30 2023, which helps for any newly discovered even numbers since gpt-3.5s launch!

vunderba•8mo ago
Perhaps I should file an issue to increase the accuracy by including a RAG database in LanceDB with embeddings for the set of even numbers up to 32-bits.
elif•8mo ago
Feeding that into your prompt will increase the token costs
ukuina•8mo ago
This doesn't work if I use a reasoning model like o3, which does not allow setting max_tokens.

Without reasoning, how can I be SURE a number is even?

hartator•8mo ago
Multiple models?
parpfish•8mo ago
I think before you would deploy this to prod, you should wrap it with a few guardrails to make sure it’s not hallucinating. Pretty simple — just take the output from the llm and see if it agrees with a simple mod2 operation.

Of it agrees, return model output to the user. Otherwise do a couple of retries with different prompts.

mrheosuper•8mo ago
mod2 is outdated and has not been updated for years, nobody uses it anymore
s1mplicissimus•8mo ago
This package has saved me so many hours of tedious gruntwork. It's like a junior developer - you still have to manually check their work, but when it's correct, it's a great productivity improvement.

And don't forget where this will go in a couple years with improved models and more computing power, it's gonna be awesome!

[/i]

darepublic•8mo ago
pro tip: play around with the temperature especially when using big numbers as input
hzambo•8mo ago
Wow, amazing tip. This hack improved my workflow by 10x.
Waterluvian•8mo ago
Only 9x for me. What am I doing wrong? Can you share your vscode colour scheme file?
floren•8mo ago
What model were you using? You need to use gpt-3.14-tastesgreat-lessfilling, I've used it to write 130 side hustle projects this month with only prompting.
bigbuppo•8mo ago
Vibe coding your way to greatness. Wish I could do that, but it seems too hard becoming a prompt engineer. Stringing together words? That's why we have AI!
koakuma-chan•8mo ago
Are there actually still Junior Developers out there? I thought no one is hiring Junior Developers.
ArthurStacks•8mo ago
Its actually the opposite of how people think.

We hire junior devs, but not senior, and dont replace our senior devs. So our developer base is moving towards being junior weighted with less senior. The reason being a junior dev is cheaper, complains less, is more capable now through utilising generative AI, works harder to impress knowing they arent in a safe position, and we can let them go more easily with less process and less reasons needed to be given.

android521•8mo ago
you're so wrong. This only works if what you do is so simple that any junior develper can sufficiently do it well. Senior developers with AI is gonna destroy a bunch of junior developers with AI.
ArthurStacks•8mo ago
>You're so wrong, this only works if..

wrong? I'll gladly continue this 'wrong' approach if it continues to be as successful as it has over the last 6 months. Aswell as it being entertaining seeing the level of cope among 'senior' developers watching someone on 1/4th of their salary design systems better than they can

superb_dev•8mo ago
Do you plan on promoting them eventually or just replacing them once they realize they’re getting a bad deal?
ArthurStacks•8mo ago
Theyre getting paid and have a job. If they dont like that deal they can go find another one elsewhere.

But its going to get increasingly difficult to justify promoting them to higher salaries if generative AI continues as it is, as the bottom line is that there will be another junior dev out there that will do the role on less.

roughly•8mo ago
I recognize I’m not going to change your mind on this, but I’ll sure be interested to hear how all those systems are working in a year or two - although from your comments elsewhere, you run a consultancy, so I guess that’s not your problem, either.
ArthurStacks•8mo ago
Many people without experience ask this same question.

It isnt relevant. They arent just producing code and pushing it, saying it works. It undergoes the same extensive testing for stability and security as the solution written by anyone else goes through. If it passes that, then its as likely to have issues further down the line as the solution written solely by the senior dev would have.

Fulgen•8mo ago
> 1/4th of their salary

If they + AI are a replacement for senior devs, shouldn't they be paid accordingly?

ArthurStacks•8mo ago
That would defeat the purpose. The whole point is to reduce costs by getting a cheap junior dev and having them operate AI to produce the same or better result for far less
Fulgen•8mo ago
So the point is to use technological advancements only to increase company profit and not pass any on to the actual workers. If a junior costs 1/4 of a senior, they could easily paid more from the 3/4s saved (since they're also more valuable now), but I guess shareholder millions come first.
ArthurStacks•8mo ago
Of course. I'm running a business, not a welfare program
lcnPylGDnU4H9OF•8mo ago
What a way to summarize the decades of apathy that led to the current state of wealth inequality.
ArthurStacks•8mo ago
Apathy? More like the fact that the majority of people are too lazy, not motivated enough, not willing to take risks, and go out and build something of their own that results in wealth, and prefer to sit safe as someones employee, complaining about 'wealth inequality'
collingreen•8mo ago
It's interesting to watch you put zero value on work/effort/labor and huge value on risk taking (which is very different for people with different "safety nets").
koakuma-chan•8mo ago
Hey are you hiring? If you are shoot me an email, my address is in my profile. I love operating AI and being someone else's employee.
mrits•8mo ago
He's a troll account.
koakuma-chan•8mo ago
Worth a try
mrits•8mo ago
Did the juniors decide it was a better system or the seniors?
NoGravitas•8mo ago
It is legitimately hard to tell if this is a parody account.
ArthurStacks•8mo ago
Thats because youre conditioned in your culture to want the nice lies that tell you other people care by a society that wraps everything in BS.

Foreigners may consider my culture brutal and unforgiving, but at least its honest from the outset

sho_hn•8mo ago
Developers who aren't using it are already falling behind.
SamBam•8mo ago
Remember, it's not that AI that will take your job, it's the developers who need an AI to tell them if a number is even that will take your job.
1k•8mo ago
This exactly. It is more important to move fast. Screw the edge cases. As long as it’s correct _most_ of the time, you can always fix anything that’s broken tomorrow.
pavel_lishin•8mo ago
It's called "eventual consistency".
sho_hn•8mo ago
And C10k was never about those 10.000 socket connections getting the right response, either!
whatever1•8mo ago
Why on earth did the software engineering interviews were checking candidates’ ability to think about edge cases? Clearly management does not care.
echelon•8mo ago
You laugh now, but our jobs are going to be toast in 10 years.

I thought self-driving would never happen, and now it's here.

margalabargala•8mo ago
Almost here. Elon said Full Self Driving would mean full self driving within a year! That means we are less than 12 months away from not needing to drove ourselves anymore.
echelon•8mo ago
I was talking about Waymo. It's real and it's spreading everywhere.

Give it another 10-20 years and your job will probably face the same fate.

lodovic•8mo ago
15 years would be perfect to still reach retirement age. After that, good luck to whoever's left in the profession.
s1mplicissimus•8mo ago
waymo was that company that still heavily relies on manual remote operator intervention, right?
lcnPylGDnU4H9OF•8mo ago
Regardless, the car mostly driving itself while remote operators handle particularly tricky situations is a feat which will allow driver-not-in-vehicle taxis to take over. My understanding (which admittedly could be the victim of successful PR) is that the vast majority of the driving and even a majority of the trips are fully automated.
s1mplicissimus•8mo ago
"particularly tricky situations" is doing a lot of heavy lifting here to describe situations every owner of a driving license is expected to handle routinely.

driver-not-in-vehicle is an interesting approach, but calling it "self-driving" is doing the mechanical turk without the reveal. Someone less charitable might assume intentional misrepresentation for the sake of winning an internet argument.

adzm•8mo ago
Honestly this should take string input as well. Finally I could find out if a Unicode duck or the word "syzygy" are even!
jasonjmcghee•8mo ago
You might be able to optimize this by using embeddings. Store all the numbers and search "odd" and "even" until you find your number.
asidiali•8mo ago
This hit way too close to home, I’m cackling.
snorkel•8mo ago
Lacks an isVeryEven() method, otherwise looks feature complete.
agentdax5•8mo ago
I’m waiting for them to add the isEvenSteven() method. Then I can integrate this with my escrow smart contract.
crazysim•8mo ago
How reliable is this? I'm half joking too but I wouldn't mind reading a report comparing this on OpenAI and various other LLMs.

Somehow I doubt it'll be 100%... right?

geor9e•8mo ago
normally llms are pretty bad at math, but in this case it should just look at the final digit and map 10 values which I can't imagine going wrong
crazysim•8mo ago
I'm just curious how _low_ can you go before it does go wrong.
bigbuppo•8mo ago
I mean if this were a check for primes the answer would be 1.
daemonologist•8mo ago
The tokenizer might lump the last digit together with some preceding digits though. I know o200k_base (OpenAI -o models) tends to give groups of three (900001 for example is 900-001).

Anyway, I wouldn't be surprised if a non-finetuned model made some mistakes.

timewizard•8mo ago
is 0x2a even?
gruez•8mo ago
I tried with this on chatgpt.com (anonymous) and it was wrong:

>You are an AI assistant designed to answer questions about numbers. You will only answer with only the word true or false.

>Is 393330370227914821469106615363204944758938252979261537157082994586230072180858944545028761701928694832864623009988147774229437650643225379825905427239525512110359581021414640894111281701792224552922491447051506246553646282117414112976459608594044929244664050172002138933343230226871897567 an even number?

response:

>True

The prompt was the same used as the library: https://github.com/Calvin-LL/is-even-ai/blob/b00dbfcbb89a197...

Too•8mo ago
To be fair, Javascript double point precision get tripped up by such large numbers as well.
est•8mo ago
its as accurate as how Tiktokenizer deal with numeral characters
nop_slide•8mo ago
Might be more reliable to ask it to generate a JS function to compute is-even, then just js eval the returned code with the args.

What could go wrong

jameslk•8mo ago
60% of the time, it works every time
joshdavham•8mo ago
I’m glad you included an isOdd() method. I was about to ask how you’d check for that.
daft_pink•8mo ago
Venture capitalist here… how can I invest?
bigbuppo•8mo ago
Finally, a reason to use AI.
iamthemonster•8mo ago
This is pretty useless to be honest. It's good for telling whether a number is even, but in our industry we need more powerful functionality. We also need to know whether a number is odd.
avandekleut•8mo ago
Someone should implement this using tool calls.
charles_f•8mo ago
RTFM, it's not only implementing isOdd but also a large set of rarely used advance operations such as isEqual, or isGreaterThan

Trully AI is astonishing

YokoZar•8mo ago
Great news! The package includes an isOdd function as well!
nbittich•8mo ago
isn't it breaking the one package one responsibility principle?uncle bob wouldn't be happy, it doesn't seem clean
whynotmaybe•8mo ago
Why a specific function ?

With a few lines of code, you can just create a list with all the numbers that are even and when you need to check if a number is odd, you simply have to check if it's in the list.

sureIy•8mo ago
Do we have enough spaces in the ALL_NUMBERS array or do we want to group them by thousands?

ALL_NUMBERS_00001

ALL_NUMBERS_00002

kaibee•8mo ago
Yeah, some of the bigger numbers were a problem, so we switched to using a horizontally scaling db cluster so that we could cover all of the (useful) numbers. When we encounter a new number, it gets routed to the appropriate db where the results of the function are cached after being calculated. We're thinking of spinning it off as an API service actually if there's any interest.
iamthemonster•8mo ago
we fired all our junior devs so we can't write code any more
turnsout•8mo ago
Yes, this is what we do as a RAG workflow. We created a list of all 32bit unsigned integers and whether they were even or odd, and we pass that into the context. The future is amazing!
Charon77•8mo ago
I.. can't tell if you're joking or not. Pretty sure someone out there is unironically doing something as stupid as this in production
ryanpandya•8mo ago
The good news is they're definitely joking. The bad news is that indeed, there's definitely someone out there doing this unironically.
whynotmaybe•8mo ago
Yes, there is.

A former co-worker had to print 5 lines of text. Sometimes, some of the lines were empty but he didn't want to print an empty line.

So he did the usual, use 'if', a lot of 'if'. He handled all the possible cases of empty VS not empty lines.

MikeTheGreat•8mo ago
I'm new to RAG and have a question: how do you get all the numbers into the context window?

Does the RAG part look up just the needed number?

I think that Gemini has a million token window (yes?) - do you have access to a model with a larger window?

Regardless, I find your ideas intriguing and wish to subscribe to your Substack.

turnsout•8mo ago
We have an agentic system that looks up the context size, and then summarizes the even/odd table if necessary. We lose a little bit of accuracy, but now we can handle any model. Be sure to like & subscribe!
int_19h•8mo ago
Have you tried quantizing them down to 4 bits to save on RAM?
justsid•8mo ago
I have found that even 2 bit quantization works, but you have to make sure you only discard the LABs (that’s what we are calling the Left Aligned Bits internally). I have no idea why it works so well but it has cut our costs significantly.
crubier•8mo ago
You can achieve this super simply this by prompting the OpenAI API to call this tool and reverse the output.
SamBam•8mo ago
I tried that, but I kept getting "eurt" and "eslaf" and I'm not sure what to do with those. Do I need to send it back to the AI?
nbittich•8mo ago
you might need to upgrade your vercel plan
Cerium•8mo ago
Simply add one to the number and then test it again.
briansm•8mo ago
"This is pretty useless to be honest."

I remember saying that about Bitcoin 15 years ago.

ashton314•8mo ago
…but there’s only one dependency!! This goes against the NPM ethos of importing anything and everything that you might be tempted to just handle yourself. I’ll be waiting for the Enterprise Version that uses the appropriate number of dependencies.
jaza•8mo ago
Great that this is a library. Really need this as a SaaS too. iseven.ai anyone?
alluro2•8mo ago
With this amount of innovation and market fit, I see $2B evaluation in ~3 months EASILY. Exit to one of the large players for $3B.
mitthrowaway2•8mo ago
Is there a version I can run locally? I don't want OpenAI training on my integers.
avs733•8mo ago
you need the roomHeater fork. It uses the Climate Change 1.5C license
bosky101•8mo ago
Rofl
johnisgood•8mo ago
Why? Do you have anything to hide?[1].

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illegal_number

Asilvorcarp•8mo ago
Boss: replace all ancient assembly opcodes with AI-powered ones!
yalogin•8mo ago
On a similar note, I was testing LLM's code writing ability and asked Qwen to write me a model to reverse a numerical string. It gave me code and instructions to compile and run. However it had errors in it and after few attempts asking it to fix it, I was able to compile and run. But, alas, the code just kept failing and generated hubris. I gave up. Not to pick on Qwen. I actually like it much better than chatGPT. I have seen Qwen give correct responses when chatGPT lied and gave me wrong information for the exact same question.
lrvick•8mo ago
The sad reality is every large production NPM codebase will rely on this within 5 years, just like is-even.
cobbzilla•8mo ago
This still does actual work. Where are echo-ai and cat-ai?
alexitosrv•8mo ago
This is the best chain of comments in a HN thread in a long time. Happy to see the hacker spirit strong!
kevinventullo•8mo ago
This is never going to scale. Eventually we’re going to run out of numbers which have been manually checked for evenness by a human, and instead the training data for the checks will be polluted by numbers which have only been verified by computers.
jwillp•8mo ago
Training computers on human stupidity has got to be infinitely scalable, by induction.
lucaspfeifer•8mo ago
Great, now can you make an AI-powered type checker? I wish to expel those pesky types, which too often seem to exist only to clutter my otherwise pristine code. :)
leshokunin•8mo ago
Does it also check types to make sure I typed 5 as an int and not a string? Hopefully the ai can solve that
spacechild1•8mo ago
When do we get the AI powered upgrade of https://github.com/mitsuhiko/is-jonschlinkert?
fred_is_fred•8mo ago
I saw a Grok fork of this but it's using 88 and 14 as the only examples for some reason.
alluro2•8mo ago
It would be great if it could also save results to a blockchain. Immutability. IYKYK.

With a layer of smart contracts, dApp on top, this thing could be mooning. When Lambo? In days.

rixed•8mo ago
it doesn't say if it's implemented in rust i had to click on the link to find out please future hn posters start every submission also with an exemple so i can see if i like the syntax
xarope•8mo ago
software engineering at its finest, using the power of 10,000* GPU cycles to determine one of mankind's toughest questions.

* I might be off by several magnitudes too low

io84•8mo ago
Kudos to the open source contributors but honestly this is the kind of area where the big commercial players need to step up and help with the heavy lifting.
HocusLocus•8mo ago
f(): To test if n is even return the value of f(n-2). Special cases for zero and one. Recursion for the win.
azhenley•8mo ago
You should try Mirror. The LLM-powered programming-by-example programming language I made:

signature is_even(x: number) -> bool

example is_even(0) -> true

example is_even(1) -> false

example is_even(222) -> true

example is_even(-99) -> false

It will take your examples and "compile" to a callable function. You can read more or try it out: https://austinhenley.com/blog/mirrorlang.html

brundolf•8mo ago
Amazing, no notes
ivape•8mo ago
I don't understand why everyone is making fun of this. This is how math is seriously going to be done soon enough.
otabdeveloper4•8mo ago
No, it seriously won't.

LLM's are useless for math, they can't into rigorous proofs.

> but my olympiad benchmarks!

Those are fake. Overfitting on the test set.

asdefghyk•8mo ago
IF number ends in 2,4,6,8,0 and >0 its even .....
lbrunson•8mo ago
Doesn’t seem extensive enough I’d rather have the AI check just to be sure
downboots•8mo ago
3.14 is even
Loocid•8mo ago
-2 isn't even?
willmarquis•8mo ago
Finally, someone had the courage to disrupt the tyranny of the modulo operator. Who needs n % 2 === 0 when you can invoke a large language model and incur network latency, token limits, and API costs to answer the age-old question: is this number even? Truly, we’re living in the future.
riwsky•8mo ago
I can't even.

…Until now.

downboots•8mo ago
Is this program even? Something about it feels very odd.

[0] https://stackoverflow.com/questions/22969183/is-every-progra...

bosky101•8mo ago
Sorry for the offtopic post, but I am looking to hire someone with 10 years of experience with is-even-ai. Urgent. Your first unpaid assignment will be to help load balance a bunch of MCP servers to add and THEN check if it's even. So much to go from here! We're a single threaded GPU first identity operator company with a lot history of returning the same thing. We're now expanding to combine and add multiple things. In 6 months of SOTA fine tuning we can already add upto 3 numbers. An MCP first. With temperature 1 we even add random numbers. An industry first. And we're just getting started. Join us. We're adding to our team!
66yatman•8mo ago
This is a joke right?
aubanel•8mo ago
Certainly not, it's actually possible to add 3 float32 numbers with 90% precision using AI! With a recent breakthrough, the team is working on pushing that to 10, we have enough cracked engineers to hope to make it happen soon!
Joker_vD•8mo ago
By "10", you mean "10% precision", or "10 float32 numbers"?
marcusb•8mo ago
Yes.
bosky101•8mo ago
"Karen, can you print, scan and mail me a copy of our NDA policy for our non-external internal employees"
tasuki•8mo ago
If I were a hiring manager and saw your comment, I wouldn't hire you. Could it have been a joke in a more obvious way? Do you think all the other comments here are serious?
hyperhello•8mo ago
The parent comment was perfectly clear. Please familiarize yourself with the rules of the website that you are looking at.
thiht•8mo ago
> I am looking to hire someone with 10 years of experience with is-even-ai

is-even-ai is only 7 month old so 10 years of experience is impossible, this is clearly a joke!

aubanel•7mo ago
No it's not for a 17.1428x engineer like me!
squillion•8mo ago
I can’t even.
jerrygoyal•8mo ago
that's odd.
debaserab2•8mo ago
do leftPad next!
dmos62•8mo ago
Am I the only one that read this as "are you even using ai for this number?".
ChocolateGod•8mo ago
Thanks, I can now use this to claim my application that has absolutely nothing to do with AI is now AI powered
rapnie•8mo ago
First we invented fire. Then along came the wheel. Countless inventions followed. Today, using the most brilliant minds of our time, the technology of billionaires, and hubris that runs thickly through our veins.. we made not just another step. We leapt head on into uncertain future. It feels odd. Are we even there?
mmustapic•8mo ago
This is so stupid, we know LLMs are not good enough for deterministic calculations. Just by running it I sometimes get that 31232198731 is even.

This is why I rolled out my own version that uses my own MCP server to call bc.

thiht•8mo ago
I have a few qualms with this library:

1. For an AI engineer, you can already build such a system yourself quite trivially by fine-tuning a lightweight inference model, deploying it behind a FastAPI endpoint, and orchestrating requests with a custom prompt pipeline. If you want to go further, you could even ensemble multiple LLMs for higher evenness accuracy.

2. It doesn't actually replace the modulo operator. Most people I know just use `n % 2 === 0` to check if a number is even, and they still keep that knowledge handy in case the AI service is down. This does not solve the reliability issue.

3. It does not seem very "viral" or income-generating. I know this is premature at this point, but without charging users for the library, is it reasonable to expect to make money off of this?

nbittich•8mo ago
I don't think you can do 1. without distilling & quantization
the_af•8mo ago
Where I work, they are laying off all even parity engineers, to be replaced with this. They are keeping the odd parity engineers.

This will achieve their goal of replacing half the staff with AI... at least I think so, I should check with is-half-ai.

jgalt212•8mo ago
The other joke package is-even has 179K weekly downloads. Is an LLM making up these numbers as well, or is this the Dead Internet at work? And if it's the Dead Internet, has the Dead Internet ever heard of caching? Maybe the Dead Internet gets a kickback from S3 egress fees.

https://www.npmjs.com/package/is-even

moritzwarhier•8mo ago
I don't think this isEven AI.

It's a remote server running assembler, C and and CGI code, it sends your OpenAI key to the Super Intelligence to make paperclips and reaps the benefit of all the productivity increase by AI for the creator.

Who of course is made from paperclips.

jsomedon•8mo ago
uh.. Are these comments in this thread even serious? Because they surely feel odd to read.