Actually, that is the IAU stance. And their definition for exoplanet includes small, non-rounded objects orbiting stars which would be asteroids (or comets or whatever) if they happened to be around the Sun. All that…
They're not very toxic, but my experience is that it's a small, elite community and they're very good at the game. You're going to have to go all in on learning the game, putting in massive effort into every game just…
> Leading on from that, the staff are the most dangerous. My daughter has had generated exercises provided to her from multiple teachers, which are quite frankly entirely wrong. This was hilariously pointed out after I…
By... another AI model. Which uses statistical generation to decide whether the answer is likely to be accurate or not.
Sounds like Spain all right. The article also makes a big deal out of country-level factors like the system of autonomous communities, governance, in-house expertise etc. But all of those should apply to Malaga as well,…
Because it's not open for modification by the general public? (emphasis general, not just technically minded people) Manufacturers need to pick a lane - either fully open, and then people who need it can harden their…
From their mission statement: > I also object to making myself and my work depend on paying a subscription fee to anyone. I don't want an outage at Anthropic to affect my ability to do my work. I think it is a grave…
Yeah, probably. One of the worst things about LLM writing is how it makes big promises of what it can prove in some piece of writing, and then never really follows up on that, or has specifics that go all the way…
What does that have to do with anything? Is reading comprehension really this bad nowadays?
> > I do think they're worried about what it'll do to their prestige > Why must this always be the argument? It was the same with cryptocurrencies and NFTs, there is a specific type of proponent who always accuses…
> I do think Ed in intentionally ignorant of the capabilities of LLMs. I think it's more complicated than that too. He's pretty well versed in the stated capabilities of LLMs. The fact that he isn't a deeply involved…
Sparta never really kicked butt, they just propagandized themselves as having done so in the past, even though their performance is pretty average compared to other city states (and very dependent on their tributaries…
Either they're BS, or the people making these statements are self-incriminating to a terrible degree, either they don't care about their work or are outputting a very low level of quality and being amazed at how "great"…
> * Valuation of the sp500, the hyperscalers and Nvidia is (mostly) reasonable based on earnings That is a hell of a statement to make (their earnings are mostly negative, after all, except nvidia). Would require…
Or Nier, which are inspired by and connected to Shadow of the Colossus in the same way as SotC is connected to Zelda (explicitly mentioned in the article)
> a big box store in a giant parking lot You know it's bad when stores don't even "have" parking lots, but are "in" them.
It does, but hey the post above was complaining about recommendation apps in general so, yeah.
Sponsored fear-mongering propaganda, why is this here?
> Examples: we still can’t manage playlists of albums, or down signal genres of music or even artists, or separate “calm” music for sleep from all the other generative playlist rankings they use. Youtube music thinks…
> > Machine learning was definitely nonexistent at that point. > Are you sure about that? Incredible statement to make, not only did machine learning exist, but neural networks existed! The first perceptrons were built…
They have common ancestors, but it really should be "the crocodiles had split from the avian lineage", with avians including dinosaurs at that moment in time
AI or not, it's such a bad article that constantly repeats itself and spends more time (and words) promising the upcoming sections and "deep insights" than it does on actually writing any of those facts.
> Or is it more young men vs the establishment where the establishment wins the vast majority of the time but occasionally a young dude makes the right longshot bet? Seems like the latter - except that not only…
> It would hinge on whether DirectInput can talk to games that expect Xinput. As far as I know, nope. Some games also get really confused if you have Xinput and DirectInput devices plugged in at the same time - for me,…
Especially if you use auto-complete AI, ironically. You type a few characters, the line fills out in less than a second, as opposed to a reasoning model that takes maybe a second per 2-3 lines it writes out.
Actually, that is the IAU stance. And their definition for exoplanet includes small, non-rounded objects orbiting stars which would be asteroids (or comets or whatever) if they happened to be around the Sun. All that…
They're not very toxic, but my experience is that it's a small, elite community and they're very good at the game. You're going to have to go all in on learning the game, putting in massive effort into every game just…
> Leading on from that, the staff are the most dangerous. My daughter has had generated exercises provided to her from multiple teachers, which are quite frankly entirely wrong. This was hilariously pointed out after I…
By... another AI model. Which uses statistical generation to decide whether the answer is likely to be accurate or not.
Sounds like Spain all right. The article also makes a big deal out of country-level factors like the system of autonomous communities, governance, in-house expertise etc. But all of those should apply to Malaga as well,…
Because it's not open for modification by the general public? (emphasis general, not just technically minded people) Manufacturers need to pick a lane - either fully open, and then people who need it can harden their…
From their mission statement: > I also object to making myself and my work depend on paying a subscription fee to anyone. I don't want an outage at Anthropic to affect my ability to do my work. I think it is a grave…
Yeah, probably. One of the worst things about LLM writing is how it makes big promises of what it can prove in some piece of writing, and then never really follows up on that, or has specifics that go all the way…
What does that have to do with anything? Is reading comprehension really this bad nowadays?
> > I do think they're worried about what it'll do to their prestige > Why must this always be the argument? It was the same with cryptocurrencies and NFTs, there is a specific type of proponent who always accuses…
> I do think Ed in intentionally ignorant of the capabilities of LLMs. I think it's more complicated than that too. He's pretty well versed in the stated capabilities of LLMs. The fact that he isn't a deeply involved…
Sparta never really kicked butt, they just propagandized themselves as having done so in the past, even though their performance is pretty average compared to other city states (and very dependent on their tributaries…
Either they're BS, or the people making these statements are self-incriminating to a terrible degree, either they don't care about their work or are outputting a very low level of quality and being amazed at how "great"…
> * Valuation of the sp500, the hyperscalers and Nvidia is (mostly) reasonable based on earnings That is a hell of a statement to make (their earnings are mostly negative, after all, except nvidia). Would require…
Or Nier, which are inspired by and connected to Shadow of the Colossus in the same way as SotC is connected to Zelda (explicitly mentioned in the article)
> a big box store in a giant parking lot You know it's bad when stores don't even "have" parking lots, but are "in" them.
It does, but hey the post above was complaining about recommendation apps in general so, yeah.
Sponsored fear-mongering propaganda, why is this here?
> Examples: we still can’t manage playlists of albums, or down signal genres of music or even artists, or separate “calm” music for sleep from all the other generative playlist rankings they use. Youtube music thinks…
> > Machine learning was definitely nonexistent at that point. > Are you sure about that? Incredible statement to make, not only did machine learning exist, but neural networks existed! The first perceptrons were built…
They have common ancestors, but it really should be "the crocodiles had split from the avian lineage", with avians including dinosaurs at that moment in time
AI or not, it's such a bad article that constantly repeats itself and spends more time (and words) promising the upcoming sections and "deep insights" than it does on actually writing any of those facts.
> Or is it more young men vs the establishment where the establishment wins the vast majority of the time but occasionally a young dude makes the right longshot bet? Seems like the latter - except that not only…
> It would hinge on whether DirectInput can talk to games that expect Xinput. As far as I know, nope. Some games also get really confused if you have Xinput and DirectInput devices plugged in at the same time - for me,…
Especially if you use auto-complete AI, ironically. You type a few characters, the line fills out in less than a second, as opposed to a reasoning model that takes maybe a second per 2-3 lines it writes out.