darby_eight
No user record in our sample, but darby_eight has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
No user record in our sample, but darby_eight has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
> its reasoning capabilities To be clear, LLMs are not capable of reasoning.
> deny the risk entirely, or to act as if it's ridiculous to be concerned about such things in my opinion is just an intellectually ignorant position to hold. This would take someone actually articulating what this risk…
> The risk of the rise of AGI can someone explain what the risk of this actually is? I just assumed it was a regulatory capture ploy. IMO it is massively distracting from the very real and very measurable impact the…
> Every language has morphemes for the simple reason that every word is at least one morpheme. Sure, if you define "morpheme" as a collection of syllables that's meaningful to people using alphabetic script. I don't see…
> you still need to disassemble the ROM up front and annotate it heavily before it can be recompiled. Why? Surely it's more straightforward to do binary-to-binary translation. No human input needed!
> Anyway, around here, even a small investment in reducing idling (or just cutting funding for traffic quiescence projects) would be equivalent to increasing vehicle fuel economy by something like 20-80%. sure, but I'd…
ok, use a flaming trash can instead. Same result.
? Is this a joke
TBH I never thought to even call the speech processing in my a head a "little voice" until someone accused me of not having an inner monologue. I don't perceive it as audio at all unless I put effort into it. Meanwhile…
Only in languages that have morphemes! This is hardly a universal attribute of language so much as an attribute of those that use an alphabet to encode sounds. It makes more sense to just bypass the encoding and…
> On a character level this should be trivial. Characters are not the semantic components of words—these are syllables. Generally speaking, anyway. I've got to imagine this approach would yield higher quality results…
In the sense they're used as English prefixes, paleo is many orders of magnitude older than archeo. Hence words like "paleoarchaeology", which starts around 10kya.
Sure, but I'd be absolutely flabbergasted if they didn't come from kidnapped Palestinians.
> Graphics and PDFs are much lower on the priority scale. Unless of course you read books that have graphics or come in pdf form.
I am not watching a video
I smell Penrose bullshit in the air Of course the brain uses quantum mechanics, it exists in the real world. What has yet to be demonstrated is any link to consciousness.
They've been the benchmark for amazon kindle books. They suck for pdfs or anything with graphics.
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> Black market organ harvesting of live prisoners didn't even cross my mind when reading this headline. It's not that crazy: https://www.westernmassnews.com/2023/05/11/getting-answers-b...
I'm somewhat surprised people still watch YouTube with the horrible recommendations and non-stop spam
Archeocomputation is better imo. "Paleo-" typically implies geological timescales rather than decades.
Performant 3d acceleration in the guest OS is still quite difficult to find an open source solution for, and linux these days relies heavily on this for window management. Mac hosts at least have…
What is Visual Studio used for these days? Of course windows development, and I'm guessing xbox development too. Anything else?
qemu works as well as it always did—which is to say slow as hell but good enough for automation in a pinch
I'm legitimately confused why anyone would log on to it if not to use it like social media