>gratify the ego of the author I'm sorry that you're not mathematically literate but that is no reason to cast aspersions on expositors that have 1) zero obligation to cater to your needs 2) receive zero compensation…
i'm gonna get downvoted for elitism but it's very clearly "aspirational upvotes" from people that don't actually know any ML and won't ever end up learning any. to wit: no one that actually studies seriously spends this…
i didn't mean to nitpick and it's not nitpicky since there are now open toolchains (though not for xilinx) that you support verilog as a frontend http://www.clifford.at/yosys/ http://www.clifford.at/icestorm/
you don't need vivado to modify the hdl, you need vivado (or some other proprietary xilinx toolchain) to produce the bitstream which actually deploys to the fpga.
i read polya's book as an undergrad to my detriment. 10 years later and having "solved" several problems, i can authoritatively say that it is not how difficult problems are solved. the real "how to solve it" for…
there is some slight difference but i don't remember what it is. i wrote a blog post about abel-ruffini based on those two videos and i remember there being some things that were clearer in one rather than the other…
is this the first instance of an article title that ends with a question mark where the answer is in fact yes?
arnold's proof is the most intuitive and what made it click after years of being responsible for understanding it (several years of algebra at the undergrad and grad level): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zeRXVL6qPk4
>with people he didn't consider mentally slow. your whole point is that no such people existed?
>You sure about that? Society has MASSIVELY benefited from von Neumann's work. If the cost of that was a few people's hurt feelings at his inability to interact with them a way that doesn't hurt their feelings it was a…
Lol this is exactly what I preemptively alluded to - how we (as a culture) enable this kind of behavior. It becomes even worse when you realize that at least the ultra wealthy pay people for the right to abuse them and…
lol people don't understand that science at gerard 't hooft's level is just as petty and vulgar as your local bar. what i mean is very accomplished scientists brag and sneer and bluster all the time - they feel entitled…
>I never heard of anyone doing this, is there an example of this? ahem... https://www.wolframscience.com/
E.g. Pavan lol
Without reading the paper, I think you have it a little backwards - the IR doesn't itself allow for more general functions. More general functions are possible (in theory) because the frontend (this Triton language) is…
>Anyone who isn’t excited by augmented reality tech is just.... I dunno... bored of life? lol isn't this just the most ironic claim? i'm not excited by augmented reality exactly because i'm not bored with life (i.e.…
you do realize that ENIAC, i.e. the computer that arguably helped the US win ww2, only had about 15 bits right?
you're trying to say because a decoder maps n -> 2^n that it's comparable to a QC. lol. my friend you clearly don't understand interference and entanglement. btw the circuits in quantum circuits clearly aren't just…
>currently they don't have even 1 logical qubit wut? different QEC produce differently sized logical qubits and there are absolutely machines with enough physical qubits to amount to a logical qubit:…
they do and you can get time on one (5 qubits) right now https://quantum-computing.ibm.com/composer/files/new if you don't think these are computers then you just don't know what a computer really is…
i'm not one of those people that overindexes on this even to me it stood out: why bring up the guy's ethnicity? it never comes up again in the post.
one thing i wish for in a paper reader: hover (or click) on a reference and get a preview of the cite or fig. that way i don't lose my place in what i'm reading before landing on a cite that's just an authors self cite…
lol doesn't this create perverse incentives - i.e. you're incentivized to actually make Julia slower sine it'll lead to being able to charge more for compute :p
>I think I'm missing what the problem with that is. I'm complaining that publishing endless papers on your methods that are trained on endless amounts of synthetic data is more about paper churn than contributing…
sure but it doesn't hurt that you have infinite data too (i.e. the thing most other ML research is bound by). like you can't argue that it's not a very comfortable corner to be in wrt being able to publish.
>gratify the ego of the author I'm sorry that you're not mathematically literate but that is no reason to cast aspersions on expositors that have 1) zero obligation to cater to your needs 2) receive zero compensation…
i'm gonna get downvoted for elitism but it's very clearly "aspirational upvotes" from people that don't actually know any ML and won't ever end up learning any. to wit: no one that actually studies seriously spends this…
i didn't mean to nitpick and it's not nitpicky since there are now open toolchains (though not for xilinx) that you support verilog as a frontend http://www.clifford.at/yosys/ http://www.clifford.at/icestorm/
you don't need vivado to modify the hdl, you need vivado (or some other proprietary xilinx toolchain) to produce the bitstream which actually deploys to the fpga.
i read polya's book as an undergrad to my detriment. 10 years later and having "solved" several problems, i can authoritatively say that it is not how difficult problems are solved. the real "how to solve it" for…
there is some slight difference but i don't remember what it is. i wrote a blog post about abel-ruffini based on those two videos and i remember there being some things that were clearer in one rather than the other…
is this the first instance of an article title that ends with a question mark where the answer is in fact yes?
arnold's proof is the most intuitive and what made it click after years of being responsible for understanding it (several years of algebra at the undergrad and grad level): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zeRXVL6qPk4
>with people he didn't consider mentally slow. your whole point is that no such people existed?
>You sure about that? Society has MASSIVELY benefited from von Neumann's work. If the cost of that was a few people's hurt feelings at his inability to interact with them a way that doesn't hurt their feelings it was a…
Lol this is exactly what I preemptively alluded to - how we (as a culture) enable this kind of behavior. It becomes even worse when you realize that at least the ultra wealthy pay people for the right to abuse them and…
lol people don't understand that science at gerard 't hooft's level is just as petty and vulgar as your local bar. what i mean is very accomplished scientists brag and sneer and bluster all the time - they feel entitled…
>I never heard of anyone doing this, is there an example of this? ahem... https://www.wolframscience.com/
E.g. Pavan lol
Without reading the paper, I think you have it a little backwards - the IR doesn't itself allow for more general functions. More general functions are possible (in theory) because the frontend (this Triton language) is…
>Anyone who isn’t excited by augmented reality tech is just.... I dunno... bored of life? lol isn't this just the most ironic claim? i'm not excited by augmented reality exactly because i'm not bored with life (i.e.…
you do realize that ENIAC, i.e. the computer that arguably helped the US win ww2, only had about 15 bits right?
you're trying to say because a decoder maps n -> 2^n that it's comparable to a QC. lol. my friend you clearly don't understand interference and entanglement. btw the circuits in quantum circuits clearly aren't just…
>currently they don't have even 1 logical qubit wut? different QEC produce differently sized logical qubits and there are absolutely machines with enough physical qubits to amount to a logical qubit:…
they do and you can get time on one (5 qubits) right now https://quantum-computing.ibm.com/composer/files/new if you don't think these are computers then you just don't know what a computer really is…
i'm not one of those people that overindexes on this even to me it stood out: why bring up the guy's ethnicity? it never comes up again in the post.
one thing i wish for in a paper reader: hover (or click) on a reference and get a preview of the cite or fig. that way i don't lose my place in what i'm reading before landing on a cite that's just an authors self cite…
lol doesn't this create perverse incentives - i.e. you're incentivized to actually make Julia slower sine it'll lead to being able to charge more for compute :p
>I think I'm missing what the problem with that is. I'm complaining that publishing endless papers on your methods that are trained on endless amounts of synthetic data is more about paper churn than contributing…
sure but it doesn't hurt that you have infinite data too (i.e. the thing most other ML research is bound by). like you can't argue that it's not a very comfortable corner to be in wrt being able to publish.