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Waymo's rapid growth πŸ“ˆ, OpenAI customization πŸ€–, best dev interview questionπŸ‘¨β€πŸ’»

Waymo is now providing more than 100,000 paid robotaxi rides per week in the US. It serves the most trips in San Francisco 

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TLDR 2024-08-21

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Big Tech & Startups

Waymo says it has doubled its weekly paid robotaxi trips to 100,000 since May (2 minute read)

Waymo is now providing more than 100,000 paid robotaxi rides per week in the US. It serves the most trips in San Francisco. The company claims that its driverless vehicles have driven over 14.8 million rider-only miles. It also claims that the Waymo Driver is 3.5 times better at avoiding crashes that cause injuries and 3 times better at avoiding police-reported crashes than human drivers.
OpenAI's Most Advanced Model Can Now Be Customized. Here's How (2 minute read)

OpenAI's GPT-4o and GPT-4o mini can now be fine-tuned and customized by developers for business use. Developers can now use their own datasets to enhance the model's knowledge base with proprietary information and control how the model responds to specific questions. It costs $25 for every 1 million tokens used to fine-tune GPT-4o - $3 for GPT-4o mini. 1 million tokens is roughly equivalent to 2,500 pages in a standard-size book.
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Science & Futuristic Technology

Watch this robot quickly install roof shingles (1 minute read)

Renovate Robotics' Rufus V1 rooftop robot can automate one of construction's most common and dangerous tasks - roofing. The robot can currently only install shingles, but future versions will be able to rip them out and perform solar installs. It is designed for large roofs and works on slopes up to 12:12, helping contractors maximize their productivity. A video showing the robot in action is available in the article.
Against all odds, an asteroid mining company appears to be making headway (5 minute read)

AstroForge recently announced that it successfully raised $40 million in Series A funding. The company aims to mine asteroids for platinum and other precious metals. It is working to launch a spacecraft in the fourth quarter of this year that will attempt to fly by a near-Earth, metallic-rich asteroid while capturing images and taking data. The company has planned a follow-up mission that involves a larger spacecraft docking with the targeted metallic asteroid using magnets.
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Programming, Design & Data Science

πŸ“‘ Saving 300 hours, monthly, on regulation compliance with Comala Document Management for Confluence (Sponsor)

As part of the German COVID regulations, electronics leader Rohde & Schwarz needed to maintain audit readiness - including communicating regulations to 7,000 employees, with required read receipts and employee acknowledgment. Learn how Rohde & Schwarz tackled this challenge head-on with Comala Document Management by Appfire. Read the case study
Effective Changelogs (14 minute read)

Changelogs are a vital and often overlooked method of communication. This post discusses how to write a great changelog. It covers the basics (you need to at least have a changelog file), formatting, writing style, and more. A full example is provided at the end of the post.
An underrated software engineering interview question (8 minute read)

The bug squash interview involves asking candidates to find a bug and maybe write code to fix it. It is very effective because it reflects everyday software development, it's easy for the candidate to self-assess their own progress, it's difficult to cheat, and candidates who are good at it are good at it because they have practiced debugging day in and day out their entire career. The bug squash interview tests a skill rarely covered by existing interview loops. It's also fun to do.
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Miscellaneous

North America added a whole Silicon Valley's worth of data center inventory this year. It's not enough (2 minute read)

The eight primary data center markets in North America added 515 megawatts (MW) of new supply in the first half of this year. All of Silicon Valley has 459 MW of data center supply. Data center space under construction is currently at a record high. The vast majority is already leased. The insane amounts of data center capacity being built are still not enough to meet the growing demands of cloud computing and artificial intelligence providers. This demand has raised national rental rates by 6.5% on average.
Your TV set has become a digital billboard. And it's only getting worse (21 minute read)

Rather than selling as many TVs as possible, TV manufacturers are increasingly seeking recurring revenue from already-sold TVs via ad sales and tracking. Some brands already prioritize data collection and the ability to sell ads and most are trying to boost their appeal to advertisers. Smart TV OS providers are generating revenue by licensing their software and through revenue sharing of in-app purchases and subscriptions. Budget TVs are the leaders in this trend as companies often offset cheap hardware prices with ads and data collection.
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Quick Links

Get an accredited university degree β€” on your time (Sponsor)

100% online. No set class times. 200+ degrees. Low tuition rates. Online degrees at Southern New Hampshire University are perfect for career-focused learners. Inquire here (must be US-based)
An unpopular perspective on the SSO tax (15 minute read)

Many software providers reserve single sign-on capability for their more expensive pricing tiers.
PayPal could challenge Apple Wallet in the EU (3 minute read)

PayPal has broadly hinted that it plans to develop a competing wallet on iOS now that Apple has opened up the iPhone's NFC capabilities.
Codebases are uniquely hard to search semantically (6 minute read)

Code and natural language are not semantically similar - it is easier to semantic search on code bases if the code is first translated to natural language before generating embedding vectors.
On finishing things (7 minute read)

A look at what it means to 'finish' something.
Judge Blocks F.T.C.'s Noncompete Rule (3 minute read)

A federal judge has upheld a challenge to the FTC's ban on noncompete agreements, blocking it from taking effect in September as scheduled.
Guide to SB 1047 (98 minute read)

California's SB 1047 applies to entities that are either training a model that requires $100 million or more in compute, or fine tuning such a model using $10 million or more in their own additional compute (or operate and rent out a very large computer cluster).

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