Haskell positions available at Luminous Computing.

Hi all, I have 3 Haskell openings on my team at Luminous Computing, Inc. https://www.luminouscomputing.com/ https://www.luminouscomputing.com/ We are using Haskell to build our tools (chip design, architecture explorer, and customer design compiler). And I’m looking for a different individual to own each tool. Of course, in a start-up flexibility is key, but that’s the official notion of how things would be arranged. Please, take a brief look at our web site. And, if you think you might be interested, let me know, so we can chat and explore a potential fit. Thanks, David Banas Chief Architect Luminous Computing, Inc.

Am 31.01.20 um 01:19 schrieb David Banas:
Quoting from that page: """ AI should be deployed to every product we interact with on a daily basis. """ Am I the only one how is horrified when they read something like this? Greetings Ben

Ben Franksen
Am 31.01.20 um 01:19 schrieb David Banas:
https://www.luminouscomputing.com/ Quoting from that page: """ AI should be deployed to every product we interact with on a daily basis. """ Am I the only one how is horrified when they read something like this?
Beware he who thinks he has found the universal hammer. -- Jack

Of course not. Algorithmic Bias is still a hot topic of research in AI; we
definitely haven't figured that out yet.
AI is definitely *not* for "all the things".
Best,
Krystal
On Sat, 1 Feb 2020 at 17:10, Jack Kelly
Ben Franksen
writes: Am 31.01.20 um 01:19 schrieb David Banas:
https://www.luminouscomputing.com/ Quoting from that page: """ AI should be deployed to every product we interact with on a daily basis. """ Am I the only one how is horrified when they read something like this?
Beware he who thinks he has found the universal hammer.
-- Jack _______________________________________________ Haskell-Cafe mailing list To (un)subscribe, modify options or view archives go to: http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe Only members subscribed via the mailman list are allowed to post.

Well, to be fair, that webpage has quite a handful of red flags. Too vague, the budget doesn't quite add up for the things you plan to do (or for the investor names you drop), far too many investors (keeping them happy must be like herding cats), no roadmap, no "we achieved this and plan to achieve that in the next two years", 100% unrealistic ideas about entering competition (photonics or no, you'll need to build nanoscale chips, and with your current budget you have 0% chance that this will work - leaves one wondering how serious that part is, and by attribution, how serious the rest of the page is). I might be interested if I were at the beginning of my career, and were able to take risks because there's time to switch to something boring with a good income. Of course I might be totally wrong :-) But paint me a sceptic here. Am 01.02.20 um 23:13 schrieb Krystal Maughan:
Of course not. Algorithmic Bias is still a hot topic of research in AI; we definitely haven't figured that out yet. AI is definitely *not* for "all the things".
Best, Krystal
On Sat, 1 Feb 2020 at 17:10, Jack Kelly
mailto:jack@jackkelly.name> wrote: Ben Franksen
mailto:ben.franksen@online.de> writes: > Am 31.01.20 um 01:19 schrieb David Banas: >> https://www.luminouscomputing.com/ > Quoting from that page: > """ > AI should be deployed to every product we interact with on a daily basis. > """ > Am I the only one how is horrified when they read something like this?
Beware he who thinks he has found the universal hammer.

googling seems to suggest its
http://faculty.ee.princeton.edu/prucnal/?q=research/photonic-spiking-neural-...
On Sat, Feb 1, 2020 at 6:12 PM Joachim Durchholz
Well, to be fair, that webpage has quite a handful of red flags. Too vague, the budget doesn't quite add up for the things you plan to do (or for the investor names you drop), far too many investors (keeping them happy must be like herding cats), no roadmap, no "we achieved this and plan to achieve that in the next two years", 100% unrealistic ideas about entering competition (photonics or no, you'll need to build nanoscale chips, and with your current budget you have 0% chance that this will work - leaves one wondering how serious that part is, and by attribution, how serious the rest of the page is).
I might be interested if I were at the beginning of my career, and were able to take risks because there's time to switch to something boring with a good income.
Of course I might be totally wrong :-)
But paint me a sceptic here.
Am 01.02.20 um 23:13 schrieb Krystal Maughan:
Of course not. Algorithmic Bias is still a hot topic of research in AI; we definitely haven't figured that out yet. AI is definitely *not* for "all the things".
Best, Krystal
On Sat, 1 Feb 2020 at 17:10, Jack Kelly
mailto:jack@jackkelly.name> wrote: Ben Franksen
mailto:ben.franksen@online.de> writes: > Am 31.01.20 um 01:19 schrieb David Banas: >> https://www.luminouscomputing.com/ > Quoting from that page: > """ > AI should be deployed to every product we interact with on a daily basis. > """ > Am I the only one how is horrified when they read something like this?
Beware he who thinks he has found the universal hammer.
Haskell-Cafe mailing list To (un)subscribe, modify options or view archives go to: http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe Only members subscribed via the mailman list are allowed to post.
participants (6)
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Ben Franksen
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Carter Schonwald
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David Banas
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Jack Kelly
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Joachim Durchholz
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Krystal Maughan