It's indeed harder to compute the time difference, but maybe it's also an indication that mental calculation should be practiced more.
[dead]
I misread lucubratory's comment: indeed I see the same as you do. I only tried asking both question in the same session. I didn't see that point in the paper when I quickly skimmed through it to find the relevant part.…
You are moving away from the topic, which is the question of whether AIs know true and false. Your first statement was that "they don't know true and false, because they don't know anything in the cognitive sense of…
> An example I can remember from the paper is "Who is Tom Cruise's mother? [Tom Cruise's mother's name]" paired with "Who is [Tom Cruise's mother's name]'s son? [incorrect answer or "Can't answer that"]". The paper is,…
> It's not totally clear to me why simt won out over writing the vector operations. From the user side, it is probably simpler to write an algorithm once without vectors, and have a compiler translate it to every vector…
There is this bar in the center of Tokyo which hosts live coding sessions: https://metropolisjapan.com/hackers-bar/ To be honest, I've only heard of this place, but it sounds very promising.
You make a valid point: I used the word "bug" here without trying first to define it, and that led to confusion in my mind, and thus in my comment. In that comment, I used the example of programs performing an ascending…
Thank you, that's exactly what I had in mind when speaking about strongly typed languages. I don't think I could have presented it in a better way.
The way you use the word "correct" is interesting: in PL theory circles, it usually means : "bug free", but it appears that you use it to mean: "produces the results I'm looking for". Indeed, one may write a program…
It's interesting. I remember seeing the air duct on CPU in Dell servers a long time ago, I wonder if they still do that. Also, it would have been nice for the author to try each duct individually, so as to better…
> Making things modular will make them more expensive and create more failure. This may be true, but how much will the failure rate increase by? Isn't it worth the added flexibility? > Each connector, slot, screw is a…
> Battery life kinda sucks but I'm not going to fault Framework for that, I am running Linux and have done nothing to improve the situation on my end. Just in case you haven't yet looked into it: It really depends on…
I think it is also worth mentioning that the site linked at the top uses the antimirov extension to brzozovzki work on regex deivatives.
Well, I don't think that network at the time was faster than SCSI, but that's a fair point that X11 isn't quite "internet ready" (though these days with a dedicated VPN you'd probably get very good performance on the…
No, but any other source (eg. headers) used during the compilation process might be owned by a third party. A crack does not compile anything, but even if you go that road, it will be argued anyway that the patch which…
> No, I'd say X11 wasn't designed to be run on the network [...] That's just wrong. X11 was designed from the ground up to be used on the network. It just happens that nowadays requirements are different from when it…
It's indeed harder to compute the time difference, but maybe it's also an indication that mental calculation should be practiced more.
[dead]
I misread lucubratory's comment: indeed I see the same as you do. I only tried asking both question in the same session. I didn't see that point in the paper when I quickly skimmed through it to find the relevant part.…
You are moving away from the topic, which is the question of whether AIs know true and false. Your first statement was that "they don't know true and false, because they don't know anything in the cognitive sense of…
> An example I can remember from the paper is "Who is Tom Cruise's mother? [Tom Cruise's mother's name]" paired with "Who is [Tom Cruise's mother's name]'s son? [incorrect answer or "Can't answer that"]". The paper is,…
> It's not totally clear to me why simt won out over writing the vector operations. From the user side, it is probably simpler to write an algorithm once without vectors, and have a compiler translate it to every vector…
There is this bar in the center of Tokyo which hosts live coding sessions: https://metropolisjapan.com/hackers-bar/ To be honest, I've only heard of this place, but it sounds very promising.
You make a valid point: I used the word "bug" here without trying first to define it, and that led to confusion in my mind, and thus in my comment. In that comment, I used the example of programs performing an ascending…
Thank you, that's exactly what I had in mind when speaking about strongly typed languages. I don't think I could have presented it in a better way.
The way you use the word "correct" is interesting: in PL theory circles, it usually means : "bug free", but it appears that you use it to mean: "produces the results I'm looking for". Indeed, one may write a program…
It's interesting. I remember seeing the air duct on CPU in Dell servers a long time ago, I wonder if they still do that. Also, it would have been nice for the author to try each duct individually, so as to better…
> Making things modular will make them more expensive and create more failure. This may be true, but how much will the failure rate increase by? Isn't it worth the added flexibility? > Each connector, slot, screw is a…
> Battery life kinda sucks but I'm not going to fault Framework for that, I am running Linux and have done nothing to improve the situation on my end. Just in case you haven't yet looked into it: It really depends on…
I think it is also worth mentioning that the site linked at the top uses the antimirov extension to brzozovzki work on regex deivatives.
Well, I don't think that network at the time was faster than SCSI, but that's a fair point that X11 isn't quite "internet ready" (though these days with a dedicated VPN you'd probably get very good performance on the…
No, but any other source (eg. headers) used during the compilation process might be owned by a third party. A crack does not compile anything, but even if you go that road, it will be argued anyway that the patch which…
> No, I'd say X11 wasn't designed to be run on the network [...] That's just wrong. X11 was designed from the ground up to be used on the network. It just happens that nowadays requirements are different from when it…