One flow I started to experiment with was using Google's stitch to get some initial designs put together, from there would feed that into Codex/Claude Code for analysis and updates and refine the design to get it to what I wanted. After a couple of screens the patterns that you want start to emerge and the LLMs can start using those as examples for the next set of screens you want to build.
Agreed, I think the simple answer is the tax rate is one thing for a primary residence and another for non-primary residences regardless of who owns it. For example in CA, Prop 13 stays in place for your primary residence, but properties are re-assessed every year like in Texas if it's not your primary residence. In addition, take away some (or all) of the tax deductions for SFH that aren't primary residences.
Rent would go through the roof and it would become even harder to get out of the rental trap. It's better to just have a very low hard cap on the number of properties anyone can own.
One of the areas where I've struggled to get effective use out of the LLM's is with UI/UX. That isn't my primary area of expertise (backend) so it definitively could be operator error here, but I use tools like v0.dev and just can't quite get it to do what I need it to do. Anybody have any tools, workflows, suggestions for this?
In my opinion the story here is that AWS allowed them to quickly build and prove out a business idea. This in turn afforded them the luxury to make this kind of switch. Cloud did it's job.
By now, we're only capable of processing videos with consistent camera angle throughout the video, I believe trace cameras change based on players' positions, right?
I'm interested in adjusting our systems and make it work with trace cameras.
If you want send me a message and we can work to generate some data from your video. It'll help me a lot to improve Futvis.
In my opinion, which doesn't mean much, we're in a very weird spot where it's like 50/50 on usefulness and uselessness. There are certainly approaches where GenAI can be incredibly helpful, I've seen it in action in the day job. However, there are also avenues where it's complete snake oil.
Slightly off topic, however, the post references the Carlsbad desalination facility. If you find yourself in San Diego and like oysters, I would highly recommend you checkout the Carlsbad Aquafarm. Take the tour and pick up some oysters.
What's really interesting and relevant to the topic is that the oyster farm serves as a pre-filter to the desalination plant and there's an symbiotic relationship between the plant and the oyster farm.
Pick up some oysters, for eating? If these oysters serve as a pre-filter for the plant, would you not want to eat them as these oysters would contain all sorts of pollution?
> This was the first oyster farm to feature an inventive “depuration and purification” process, which involves immersing the oysters in triple-filtered seawater once they reach full size. This ensures that the oysters are a completely safe, top-quality delicious shellfish product.
> That’s a really convoluted way to say they rinse them off in clean water.
It's more than rinsing them off. Oysters are filter feeders. They need to spend enough time in clean water to pump out any contaminants. It's an FDA regulated process:
If they were pulling disgusting water into the desalination plant, it would probably damage their equipment. If you watch the video, you'll find that macroscopic contamination is the first problem they have to solve, and the oysters should be fine for that.