Strands, the New York Times' elevated word-search game, requires the player to perform a twist on the classic word search. Words can be made from linked letters — up, down, left, right, or diagonal, but words can also change direction, resulting in quirky shapes and patterns. Every single letter in the grid will be part of an answer. There's always a theme linking every solution, along with the "spangram," a special, word or phrase that sums up that day's theme, and spans the entire grid horizontally or vertically.
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The agent was able to create a very detailed documentation about the ZX Spectrum internals. I provided a few .z80 images of games, so that it could test the emulator in a real setup with real software. Again, I removed the session and started fresh. The agent started working and ended 10 minutes later, following a process that really fascinates me, and that probably you know very well: the fact is, you see the agent working using a number of diverse skills. It is expert in everything programming related, so as it was implementing the emulator, it could immediately write a detailed instrumentation code to “look” at what the Z80 was doing step by step, and how this changed the Spectrum emulation state. In this respect, I believe automatic programming to be already super-human, not in the sense it is currently capable of producing code that humans can’t produce, but in the concurrent usage of different programming languages, system programming techniques, DSP stuff, operating system tricks, math, and everything needed to reach the result in the most immediate way.