Hmm, I mean it was a lot of white stuff coming out. Again, on the street, so maybe it's different rules compared to sidewalks. Possibly sand, but I'm pretty sure it's salt.
That includes an explicit carve-out for reasonable searches. And given "innocent until proven guilty" any search is technically targeting innocent people in hopes of yielding information about a suspect. Sometimes that's a reasonable thing to do.
To loosely describe our approach: it's intentionally transparent. We start with obvious categories (health checks, debug logs, redundant attributes) that you can inspect and verify. No black box.
But underneath, Tero builds a semantic understanding of your data. Each category represents a progression in reasoning, from "this is obviously waste" to "this doesn't help anyone debug anything." You start simple, verify everything, and go deeper at your own pace.
I've seen someone in China charge using a cable dangling out a window, so I think charging infrastructure doesn't necessarily have to be an issue if you're willing to settle for the minimum viable option.
I think they're also running this at 16 bit quant. If they lower it to 8bit, they might double their output which might come out to be 11 cents per million tokens.
Now take into account that modern LLMs tend to use 4bit inference, and Blackwell is significantly more optimized for 4 bit, we can see much less than 11 cents. Maybe a speed up of 5x if using 4bit and Blackwell vs H100 and 8 bit?
So we're looking at potentially 2.2 cents per million tokens.
https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.24880 was published less than two weeks ago, which should explain why it's not more common yet. And it's not that amazing either. It's a slight quality improvement for a slight increase in cost. It's not even clear to me whether it pays for itself.
I don't know about Canada Post, but Wikipedia has a handy table listing the duration of parental leave. 3 years is a common option across various European countries: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parental_leave#Europe_and_Cent... Yes, parents with a lot of children could potentially spend a very long time out of work while still keeping their jobs, but it's rather rare to have so many children that it would become an issue.
There was an election in 2025. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_Greenlandic_general_elect... Pro-independence parties won a supermajority. The only party whose leader said that he trusts Trump in the debate before the election got 305 votes and no seats.
The next parliamentary elections are scheduled for 2029, too late for a pro-Trump swing unless he manages to stay in office somehow.
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