David Shu
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
As an Easter egg, it would be great, actually, like a little quiz game or something built into the terminal.
As an Easter egg, it would be great, actually, like a little quiz game or something built into the terminal.
Right, it can ask questions like, what is the oldest machine on your tail net or something like that. That would be a lot of fun, actually.
Right, it can ask questions like, what is the oldest machine on your tail net or something like that. That would be a lot of fun, actually.
Yeah, I don't know either. I very much went looking for something I would use features like that for, and I didn't come up with anything. If you do come up with anything, again, I'd be very happy to hear about it.
Yeah, I don't know either. I very much went looking for something I would use features like that for, and I didn't come up with anything. If you do come up with anything, again, I'd be very happy to hear about it.
That's true. I think we did actually email customers once about an out-of-date version where we were concerned about security. I think that has only come up once.
That's true. I think we did actually email customers once about an out-of-date version where we were concerned about security. I think that has only come up once.
Mostly, keeping Telescale up to date is sort of proactive, good security practice. It has fortunately not been a significant source of issues, in part due to careful design. A lot of engineers work very hard to make it that way.
Mostly, keeping Telescale up to date is sort of proactive, good security practice. It has fortunately not been a significant source of issues, in part due to careful design. A lot of engineers work very hard to make it that way.
Yeah, it's a great team.
Yeah, it's a great team.
Nice.
Nice.
Yeah. So that's, there's like an interesting sort of meta question there about LLMs around how many models there should be in the world from a sort of a consumer perspective, in a sense, because that's almost like, you know, you're just consuming it like where, and this sounds very similar to like the question of,
Yeah. So that's, there's like an interesting sort of meta question there about LLMs around how many models there should be in the world from a sort of a consumer perspective, in a sense, because that's almost like, you know, you're just consuming it like where, and this sounds very similar to like the question of,
How does search work on websites, which you could have asked 10 years ago or 20 years ago? Do I use the Wikipedia search or do I go to Google and type in my search and maybe put the word wiki at the end to bring the Wikipedia links to the top? Both of these are valid strategies for searching Wikipedia. Yeah.
How does search work on websites, which you could have asked 10 years ago or 20 years ago? Do I use the Wikipedia search or do I go to Google and type in my search and maybe put the word wiki at the end to bring the Wikipedia links to the top? Both of these are valid strategies for searching Wikipedia. Yeah.
And I honestly don't use the Wikipedia search and haven't in a while, so it may be amazing. But I have, as a consumer, a general concept that the search systems on individual websites are not terrific. And Google is baseline decent. And so as long as I'm searching public data, I would generally prefer the Google search.
And I honestly don't use the Wikipedia search and haven't in a while, so it may be amazing. But I have, as a consumer, a general concept that the search systems on individual websites are not terrific. And Google is baseline decent. And so as long as I'm searching public data, I would generally prefer the Google search.