35 comments

  • brudgers 9 days ago

    [random comment on the internet]

    Some content on the subject of AI is deeply technical, just as is some content on the subject of blockchain, lisp, retro-computing, etc.

    But most of what is written about most things (including C, reverse engineering, systems programming, etc.) is not deeply technical.

    One problem unique to AI is that “AI” doesn’t mean anything specific…I mean even your question doesn’t distinguish between articles about specific AI technologies, articles generated using LLM’s, “AI” as a marketing feature, AI as an industry, AI as an ideology etc.

  • dieselgate 9 days ago

    Textbooks, white papers and research publications if I understand what you mean by "deep technical". I like lectures and stuff too but find it difficult to refer back to later and search around.

  • bediger4000 10 days ago

    At least part of the problem is that deep technical content doesn't get upvotes. The next time you see a link to such, note the vote count. It will be small. Note the vote count on some "AI" boosting link. It will be large. Is this Anthropic, Google and OpenAI bots for is it genuine interest?

  • iefbr14 10 days ago

    There is probably still a lot out there but with the current state of the ('free') search engines you won't find much. I am painfully reminded of that every time I have to look for a datasheet that is not in my own archive yet.

  • vismit2000 9 days ago
  • dnnddidiej 9 days ago

    For Go in particular: the docs. Gophercon videos.

    In general good conference then Youtube. Even if old e.g. strangeloop. There is Fosdem etc.

  • tanlethanh 8 days ago

    Be specific! You must know what you want to read at a time, always prefer going with fundamentals, textbooks and get keywords. Use those keywords to find out the deeper level content.

  • bohdanstefaniuk 9 days ago

    In most cases documentation is enough for me when I need some help with my current day to day tasks.

    If I want do dig deeper - textbooks, white papers are still a good source.

  • wanderingpixel 10 days ago

    Read more engineering content, e.g. https://circuitcellar.com/

  • markus_zhang 10 days ago

    There are a huge number of system programming books. You can also search for system programming topics on HN.

  • crowcountry 9 days ago

    Watch lectures from Stanford, MIT, and other universities.

    • bawis 8 days ago

      What are you favourites?

  • dakiol 8 days ago

    Books.

  • 9 days ago
    [deleted]
  • slipknotfan 10 days ago

    lobste.rs has some stuff

    • alexjplant 9 days ago

      I'd love an invite if you have one to spare (no expectation either way). Email is in my profile if you feel so inclined.

      • unmole 9 days ago

        Invite sent.

        • kovoor 9 days ago

          Do you happen to have any more? Would really appreciate to have an invite as well, thanks again (email is in bio)

        • shavi71 9 days ago

          I would appreciate an invite too (email in my about column)

        • Charon77 9 days ago

          Would appreciate invite too (email in my about column)

    • spidersouris 9 days ago

      Would also be interested in an invite, if anyone has any. Email on my user page.

    • pseudo-usama 10 days ago

      lobsters genuinely seems more technical and less hype driven than HN these days

    • ken-jo 9 days ago

      Thank you for share it.

    • user68858788 9 days ago

      That's a neat site but I'm stuck looking in from the outside. Can someone spare me an invite please? My email is in my about.

    • yash1th 9 days ago

      sorry for piling on but I'd love an invite as well if you can spare :) email is in my profile.

  • tacostakohashi 9 days ago

    books

  • merrua 10 days ago

    rss

    • 9 days ago
      [deleted]
  • IndustryLens 7 days ago

    [flagged]

  • heliskyr2 3 days ago

    [flagged]

  • xvort 10 days ago

    [dead]

  • coalstartprob 9 days ago

    [dead]

  • mugivarra69 9 days ago

    [dead]