Alright that's actually pretty cool. I would've never guessed you're able to update the tab icon that quickly
It sounds to me like the science is actually pretty inconclusive on whether eating burnt toast is bad for you. At the same time unneeded worrying and stress is definitely bad for your health.
The margins on inference definetly aren’t negative. An easy way to check this is by looking at the costs of using cloud hosted open source models, which necessarily are served at a positive margin, and are much lower…
Apple does run software for detecting CSAM on pictures users store to the cloud.
Well the simplest thing would be to have test/benchmarks you do at the start and end of each “chapter” (however you define that). You fail miserably at the test at the start of each chapter, and crush it at the end. The…
They’ve been saying this for years. Every few months you’ll see an article about IV having the biggest store of lithium in the US, but nothing ever comes of it.
The study the article cited is specifically about when asking the LLMs about misinformation. I think on coding tasks and such shorter answers are usually more accurate.
Alright that's actually pretty cool. I would've never guessed you're able to update the tab icon that quickly
It sounds to me like the science is actually pretty inconclusive on whether eating burnt toast is bad for you. At the same time unneeded worrying and stress is definitely bad for your health.
The margins on inference definetly aren’t negative. An easy way to check this is by looking at the costs of using cloud hosted open source models, which necessarily are served at a positive margin, and are much lower…
Apple does run software for detecting CSAM on pictures users store to the cloud.
Well the simplest thing would be to have test/benchmarks you do at the start and end of each “chapter” (however you define that). You fail miserably at the test at the start of each chapter, and crush it at the end. The…
They’ve been saying this for years. Every few months you’ll see an article about IV having the biggest store of lithium in the US, but nothing ever comes of it.
The study the article cited is specifically about when asking the LLMs about misinformation. I think on coding tasks and such shorter answers are usually more accurate.