Join 📚 Josh Beckman's Highlights

A batch of the best highlights from what Josh's read, .

There’s an impetus to hide the technical details of the world, but I think that’s a devastating mistake. Hints of the existence of a deeper technical layer is how kids are inspired to become engineers. Turning technology into a magical black box arguably makes technology much less magical than hinting at how that black box actually works.

A Frivolous Feature

kontakt@marginalia.nu (Viktor Lofgren)

With developers spending less than a third of their time actually writing code, developer experience includes all the other stuff: maintaining code, testing, security issues, addressing incidents, and more.

The Case for 'Developer Experience' - Future

future.a16z.com

The way double descent is normally presented, increasing the number of model parameters can make performance worse before it gets better. But there is another even more shocking phenomenon called *data double descent*, where increasing the number of *training samples* can cause performance to get worse before it gets better. These two phenomena are essentially mirror images of each other. That’s because the explosion in test error depends on the ratio of parameters to training samples.

Double Descent in Human Learning

chris-said.io

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