> In the past, "labor saving technology" has always spawned alternate jobs that people could take with some retraining. Labor saving technology does not create enough alternative jobs to employ all those that it…
He's pointing out that labor has always opposed labor saving technology, despite that being the basis of our modern quality of life.
> I'm not sure how many languages you speak or encountered in the wild before, but some languages are VERY different from each other, some are a bit different and others are basically the same with some differences. I'm…
[flagged]
What's your evidence for that? And if the first 80% doesn't bias the language after post-training (which I think is what you're claiming) why not go for English or a mixture of languages, which is essentially what they…
The whole point of this project is to have an LLM that speaks European Portuguese, not Brazilian Portuguese.
> Why would you let America take 2-3% of your transaction volumes? I don't think VISA/Mastercard takes such a fee? (They'd be some of the biggest companies in the world if they did.) The fees they charge are actually…
Presumably they're making the leap that this printing technology can be leveraged to develop an alternative display technology that would change the structure in real time, kind of like color e-ink displays. It's quite…
I'd say Skyrim was just around the border where you started to get engines which uncoupled physics from FPS. This only really matters for competitive games though, so it's not surprising it wasn't prioritized.
Are the quake, goldsource, source, etc engines jank? Because they all did this, to some extent. It might be harder to find an engine from the early 2010's that didn't tie at least some physics to FPS.
> If you have a diode, then the transistor is only a small step away. It is not. We've had semiconductor diodes since 1874, but it took many decades to develop the solid state physics to understand how they worked and…
Considering two Germans in Paris independently discovered the transistor just a few months after Shockley's team, this seems like a self-serving fantasy: https://www.computerhistory.org/siliconengine/the-european-t...…
And the other side would say that if we cut welfare spending we'd have a reasonable debt to GDP ratio. It's very much political and it's a joke to pretend otherwise.
Nvidia subsidized machine learning research for years (both with CUDA, hardware donations and developing what was a very niche product line just for them) before deep learning became big, much less the advent of LLMs.…
The velocity factor is usually 0.6-0.7, never seen it as low as 0.5. And it's set by the dielectric, not the conducting material.
No, the problem is getting a high power (hundreds of watts) and high uptime EUV source, there's no reason to think this is a step towards that at the moment.
> If someone is stealing your only $20 out of your pocket and I stop them and you now have $20 in your pocket, I've just created conditions for commerce on the part of you taking that $20 and spending it someplace else…
That post was not at all worth my time, it just cherry picked data without ever putting it together to show intentional price manipulation or monopolistic behavior (no, showing concentration isn't enough). > They can't…
Those are pretty extraordinary claims with very little evidence. And, even if they are true, the obvious solution would be to enforce the already existing antitrust and competition laws, not to have the government…
Both BJTs and FETs have intrinsic exponential/logarithmic behaviors (at low biases) due to charge density being given by the Fermi-Dirac distribution since electrons are fermions.
Source? I've only seen him post religious stuff on his personal social media.
> I strongly object to anthropomorphising text transformers (e.g. "Assisted-by"). I don't think this is anthropomorphising, especially considering they also include non-LLM tools in that "Assisted-by" section. We're…
Prices keep going up and bitrates down because most streaming services (except for Netflix and YouTube) have been basically break-even or money losing for years now, and the appetite for that is cooling. Also, display…
> I think physical media might make a bit of a comeback as screen sizes increase unless streaming services up their bitrates. The latter sure seems a lot more likely than the former, my man.
> why do we allow companies to do this? It should be trivial for the people of Kansas and Missouri to come together and say we won't allow a race to the bottom. This is prisoner's dilemma 101. Or, less cynically, cities…
> In the past, "labor saving technology" has always spawned alternate jobs that people could take with some retraining. Labor saving technology does not create enough alternative jobs to employ all those that it…
He's pointing out that labor has always opposed labor saving technology, despite that being the basis of our modern quality of life.
> I'm not sure how many languages you speak or encountered in the wild before, but some languages are VERY different from each other, some are a bit different and others are basically the same with some differences. I'm…
[flagged]
What's your evidence for that? And if the first 80% doesn't bias the language after post-training (which I think is what you're claiming) why not go for English or a mixture of languages, which is essentially what they…
The whole point of this project is to have an LLM that speaks European Portuguese, not Brazilian Portuguese.
> Why would you let America take 2-3% of your transaction volumes? I don't think VISA/Mastercard takes such a fee? (They'd be some of the biggest companies in the world if they did.) The fees they charge are actually…
Presumably they're making the leap that this printing technology can be leveraged to develop an alternative display technology that would change the structure in real time, kind of like color e-ink displays. It's quite…
I'd say Skyrim was just around the border where you started to get engines which uncoupled physics from FPS. This only really matters for competitive games though, so it's not surprising it wasn't prioritized.
Are the quake, goldsource, source, etc engines jank? Because they all did this, to some extent. It might be harder to find an engine from the early 2010's that didn't tie at least some physics to FPS.
> If you have a diode, then the transistor is only a small step away. It is not. We've had semiconductor diodes since 1874, but it took many decades to develop the solid state physics to understand how they worked and…
Considering two Germans in Paris independently discovered the transistor just a few months after Shockley's team, this seems like a self-serving fantasy: https://www.computerhistory.org/siliconengine/the-european-t...…
And the other side would say that if we cut welfare spending we'd have a reasonable debt to GDP ratio. It's very much political and it's a joke to pretend otherwise.
Nvidia subsidized machine learning research for years (both with CUDA, hardware donations and developing what was a very niche product line just for them) before deep learning became big, much less the advent of LLMs.…
The velocity factor is usually 0.6-0.7, never seen it as low as 0.5. And it's set by the dielectric, not the conducting material.
No, the problem is getting a high power (hundreds of watts) and high uptime EUV source, there's no reason to think this is a step towards that at the moment.
> If someone is stealing your only $20 out of your pocket and I stop them and you now have $20 in your pocket, I've just created conditions for commerce on the part of you taking that $20 and spending it someplace else…
That post was not at all worth my time, it just cherry picked data without ever putting it together to show intentional price manipulation or monopolistic behavior (no, showing concentration isn't enough). > They can't…
Those are pretty extraordinary claims with very little evidence. And, even if they are true, the obvious solution would be to enforce the already existing antitrust and competition laws, not to have the government…
Both BJTs and FETs have intrinsic exponential/logarithmic behaviors (at low biases) due to charge density being given by the Fermi-Dirac distribution since electrons are fermions.
Source? I've only seen him post religious stuff on his personal social media.
> I strongly object to anthropomorphising text transformers (e.g. "Assisted-by"). I don't think this is anthropomorphising, especially considering they also include non-LLM tools in that "Assisted-by" section. We're…
Prices keep going up and bitrates down because most streaming services (except for Netflix and YouTube) have been basically break-even or money losing for years now, and the appetite for that is cooling. Also, display…
> I think physical media might make a bit of a comeback as screen sizes increase unless streaming services up their bitrates. The latter sure seems a lot more likely than the former, my man.
> why do we allow companies to do this? It should be trivial for the people of Kansas and Missouri to come together and say we won't allow a race to the bottom. This is prisoner's dilemma 101. Or, less cynically, cities…