Wouldn't an LLM be able to do that kind of analysis?
I'm not really sure I understand your sorting example, maybe try it out in gpt and post the link to show exactly what you mean. The refusal of the model is something trained into the model by the process of rlhf, and it…
And what other way do you recommend to invest your money in order to not get devalued by inflation?
Do you have any references/examples of this?
They know which answer is correct, they just don't want to say it.
This makes me wonder how much storage is needed for all the posts/comments on HN, since everything is "just" text?
Why isn't this a feature of documentation frameworks? Like it could be just a simple, "Hey, I see this function in the codebase has changed since the time you wrote the documemtation for it, do you want to update it's…
That's mainly because activity in the prefrontal cortex is very low - that's the part of the brain that handles problem solving, comprehension etc. and reasoning.
This exact thing happens on r/suggestmeabook, but I'm not sure it happens that often.
Wouldn't an LLM be able to do that kind of analysis?
I'm not really sure I understand your sorting example, maybe try it out in gpt and post the link to show exactly what you mean. The refusal of the model is something trained into the model by the process of rlhf, and it…
And what other way do you recommend to invest your money in order to not get devalued by inflation?
Do you have any references/examples of this?
They know which answer is correct, they just don't want to say it.
This makes me wonder how much storage is needed for all the posts/comments on HN, since everything is "just" text?
Why isn't this a feature of documentation frameworks? Like it could be just a simple, "Hey, I see this function in the codebase has changed since the time you wrote the documemtation for it, do you want to update it's…
That's mainly because activity in the prefrontal cortex is very low - that's the part of the brain that handles problem solving, comprehension etc. and reasoning.
This exact thing happens on r/suggestmeabook, but I'm not sure it happens that often.