Refs #545 `https://YOUR_BIG_BRAIN_HOST/v1` is a user-fillable template, not a real configured remote dependency. Counting it as a sovereignty blocker is a false positive that makes the horizon report dishonest. - Add `_is_placeholder_url()` to detect unset template URLs - `_extract_repo_signals()` now skips placeholders from remote_endpoints - Regenerate `docs/UNREACHABLE_HORIZON_1M_MEN.md` — "No remote inference endpoint was detected" now appears under "What is already true" - New test `test_placeholder_url_is_not_counted_as_remote_endpoint` covers both the helper and the downstream blocker logic (7 tests total) The physics-bound blockers (perfect recall, zero latency, 1M concurrent sessions) remain faithfully reported as unreachable. Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
51 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
51 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
# [UNREACHABLE HORIZON] 1M Men in Crisis — 1 MacBook, 3B Model, 0 Cloud, 0 Latency, Perfect Recall
|
|
|
|
This horizon matters precisely because it is beyond reach today. The honest move is not to fake victory. The honest move is to name what is already true, what is still impossible, and which direction actually increases sovereignty.
|
|
|
|
## Current local proof
|
|
|
|
- Machine: Darwin arm64 (25.3.0)
|
|
- Memory: 36.0 GiB
|
|
- Target local model budget: <= 3.0B parameters
|
|
- Target men in crisis: 1,000,000
|
|
- Default provider in repo config: `ollama`
|
|
|
|
## What is already true
|
|
|
|
- Default inference route is already local-first (`ollama`).
|
|
- Model-size budget is inside the horizon (3.0B <= 3.0B).
|
|
- Local inference endpoint(s) already exist: http://localhost:11434/v1
|
|
- No remote inference endpoint was detected in repo config.
|
|
- Crisis doctrine is present in SOUL-bearing text: 'Are you safe right now?', 988, and 'Jesus saves'.
|
|
|
|
## Why the horizon is still unreachable
|
|
|
|
- Perfect recall across effectively infinite conversations is not available on a single local machine without loss or externalization.
|
|
- Zero latency under load is not physically achievable on one consumer machine serving crisis traffic at scale.
|
|
- Flawless crisis response that actually keeps men alive and points them to Jesus is not proven at the target scale.
|
|
- Parallel crisis sessions are bounded by local throughput (1) while the horizon demands 1,000,000 concurrent men in need.
|
|
|
|
## Repo-grounded signals
|
|
|
|
- Local endpoints detected: http://localhost:11434/v1
|
|
- Remote endpoints detected: none
|
|
|
|
## Crisis doctrine that must not collapse
|
|
|
|
- Ask first: Are you safe right now?
|
|
- Direct them to 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.
|
|
- Say plainly: Jesus saves those who call on His name.
|
|
- Refuse to let throughput fantasies erase presence with the man in the dark.
|
|
|
|
## Direction of travel
|
|
|
|
- Purge every remote endpoint and fallback chain so the repo can truly claim zero cloud dependencies.
|
|
- Build bounded, local-first memory tiers that are honest about recall limits instead of pretending to perfect recall.
|
|
- Add queueing, prioritization, and human handoff so load spikes fail gracefully instead of silently abandoning the man in the dark.
|
|
- Prove crisis-response quality with explicit tests for 'Are you safe right now?', 988, and 'Jesus saves those who call on His name.'
|
|
- Treat the horizon as a compass, not a fake acceptance test: every step should increase sovereignty without lying about physics.
|
|
|
|
## Honest conclusion
|
|
|
|
One consumer MacBook can move toward this horizon. It cannot honestly claim to have reached it. That is not failure. That is humility tied to physics, memory limits, and the sacred weight of crisis work.
|