[flagged]
You understand me, this is most important. And thank you for explaining this exercise - but to be honest, if the article says "How to store a chess position in 26 bytes" And you actually cannot store this in 26 bytes…
Interesting perspective. I think you have a right, whats yours is yours to do as you please with - you know? But can I give you another "viewpoint"? I guess it's like, "Wow, my code, my work, what came from my brain, my…
You're proving my point. Yes, 495 possibilities CAN be stored in 9 bits. But the article shows STRING '00000034' (64 bits) as an example, not the actual 9-bit binary encoding. That's exactly the problem - claiming…
Cool, so you are basically doing local onsite deployments? The H100's are nice. I'm not that rich, so I have some 4xV100 32GB SXM2....server, dual socket - it's OK for inference. You can get when with V100s, RAM, etc…
"The 'bit-level magic' here is misleading. They're using integer representations and calling them bits. A true bit-level approach would encode positions as pure binary streams. For example, their promotion string…
[flagged]
You understand me, this is most important. And thank you for explaining this exercise - but to be honest, if the article says "How to store a chess position in 26 bytes" And you actually cannot store this in 26 bytes…
Interesting perspective. I think you have a right, whats yours is yours to do as you please with - you know? But can I give you another "viewpoint"? I guess it's like, "Wow, my code, my work, what came from my brain, my…
You're proving my point. Yes, 495 possibilities CAN be stored in 9 bits. But the article shows STRING '00000034' (64 bits) as an example, not the actual 9-bit binary encoding. That's exactly the problem - claiming…
Cool, so you are basically doing local onsite deployments? The H100's are nice. I'm not that rich, so I have some 4xV100 32GB SXM2....server, dual socket - it's OK for inference. You can get when with V100s, RAM, etc…
"The 'bit-level magic' here is misleading. They're using integer representations and calling them bits. A true bit-level approach would encode positions as pure binary streams. For example, their promotion string…