Let's say you collect stamps. I think it's a stupid and morally irresponsible way of using your free time (you should be socializing or doing sports or learning something new). Just being honest with my opinion. This is…
So Chinese LLMs are bad actors, but USA LLMs are the good guys? I don't see it that way, but I'm sure from an American perspective that how it seems.
This sounds like a very negative comment and with many generalizations. Please consider thinking about what your comments bring to the discussion
>Since this theorem is true for the standard model of the natural numbers but not provable I've always found the provable vs true comparison confusing. How can we say the statement is true under the standard model if we…
The point is not whether it can be modeled (it can), but whether you can get a closed form solution for it (you can't...or we don't know how for now)
I see a lot of people asking "what year it is" or some other question that tests knowledge lf current events. To me it sounds like a misunderstanding of what an LLM + retrieval augmentation does. If the LLM is only fed…
"are you a human?" "No, I'm a model trained by OpenAI" Nearly fooled me
Not in India, but I've seen parents here sit down at a restaurant table and shove a cell phone in front of a toddler the second they sit down. They don't allow the kid to even get bored, try to do other stuff or…
Or maybe there's no secret sauce for intelligence and if the system / organism can display all that functionality then should just say it's intelligent. I don't have a strong opinion either way, but I'm not convinced by…
Faang salary only exists on the US. Even the richest countries in Europe don't have those salaries for programmers (maybe if you work on finance or some niche subject).
In this part of the world, we're more worried about what the US government can do to us than what the Chinese can do. In other words, for many people in the world that wouldn't be an issue, it's already in the hands of…
Not an argentinean, but I don't think that's the right way to look at it. You can exchange dollars in any country and in many you can directly pay in stores if the storekeeper is flexible. You wouldn't call that a…
The language is not dumb. The writing system that people chose is...not that great (and you can call it dumb if you like). There was a choice between respecting phonetics or maximizing some other objective (respecting…
>English does not have a regulatory body like Spanish or German have. Spanish does have a regulatory agency (RAE) that we choose to follow, but AFAIK, they don't say anything about pronunciation. Spanish from Spain,…
The didn't recently have a president looking to undermine the very fabric of democracy. That already makes it better than the USA
>but if I had to choose a country to get ahead in life with the most opportunities possible as an immigrant The USA is pretty bad (compared to most rich / developed countries) in general at giving opportunities to the…
The busting and splitting up is a hard tool, but anti-trust has many other tools at their disposal, including maintaining status quo (i.e. refusing the merge of two companies). Disclaimer: I don't work in the US, so I'm…
Sounds like a two-sided market, where a company gets their value from being able to connect one side (the artists) with the other one (the venues). What I find strange is that people aren't usually reluctant to sign…
My lazy guide: This didn't make my daughter 100% bilingual, but she's up there. We live in a spanish speaking country. Netflix (where she sees all her cartoons and movies) has always been set in English. She's 7 now and…
Also 2 == 2. You're not making an argument, you're just saying that LLMs aren't human.
This comment isn't saying anything. It says "LLMs statistically choose the next token" and, because of that, it can't be anything else. We know how the LLMs were trained, so re-stating it doesn't help in anything. The…
The GP is analyzing some dimensions to figure out if the success of Baldur's Gate is surprising or not. He/she finds that, given the limited dimensions we can consider, the success is surprising. I read your reply as…
This is an old question in economics, but undoubtedly relevant now: "Is this new technology change different or similar to other technology changes?" In other technology changes, there are hundreds of jobs that…
I grew up used to reading subtitles. Listening to the original voices and languages is super interesting to me. Besides some very specific cases (I can't look at the screen all the time) I don't have any use for dubbing.
You're correct. Parent comment says something true (some / many characters don't have a representation in most fonts), but the inference it makes is wrong (this is a bottleneck for communication)
Let's say you collect stamps. I think it's a stupid and morally irresponsible way of using your free time (you should be socializing or doing sports or learning something new). Just being honest with my opinion. This is…
So Chinese LLMs are bad actors, but USA LLMs are the good guys? I don't see it that way, but I'm sure from an American perspective that how it seems.
This sounds like a very negative comment and with many generalizations. Please consider thinking about what your comments bring to the discussion
>Since this theorem is true for the standard model of the natural numbers but not provable I've always found the provable vs true comparison confusing. How can we say the statement is true under the standard model if we…
The point is not whether it can be modeled (it can), but whether you can get a closed form solution for it (you can't...or we don't know how for now)
I see a lot of people asking "what year it is" or some other question that tests knowledge lf current events. To me it sounds like a misunderstanding of what an LLM + retrieval augmentation does. If the LLM is only fed…
"are you a human?" "No, I'm a model trained by OpenAI" Nearly fooled me
Not in India, but I've seen parents here sit down at a restaurant table and shove a cell phone in front of a toddler the second they sit down. They don't allow the kid to even get bored, try to do other stuff or…
Or maybe there's no secret sauce for intelligence and if the system / organism can display all that functionality then should just say it's intelligent. I don't have a strong opinion either way, but I'm not convinced by…
Faang salary only exists on the US. Even the richest countries in Europe don't have those salaries for programmers (maybe if you work on finance or some niche subject).
In this part of the world, we're more worried about what the US government can do to us than what the Chinese can do. In other words, for many people in the world that wouldn't be an issue, it's already in the hands of…
Not an argentinean, but I don't think that's the right way to look at it. You can exchange dollars in any country and in many you can directly pay in stores if the storekeeper is flexible. You wouldn't call that a…
The language is not dumb. The writing system that people chose is...not that great (and you can call it dumb if you like). There was a choice between respecting phonetics or maximizing some other objective (respecting…
>English does not have a regulatory body like Spanish or German have. Spanish does have a regulatory agency (RAE) that we choose to follow, but AFAIK, they don't say anything about pronunciation. Spanish from Spain,…
The didn't recently have a president looking to undermine the very fabric of democracy. That already makes it better than the USA
>but if I had to choose a country to get ahead in life with the most opportunities possible as an immigrant The USA is pretty bad (compared to most rich / developed countries) in general at giving opportunities to the…
The busting and splitting up is a hard tool, but anti-trust has many other tools at their disposal, including maintaining status quo (i.e. refusing the merge of two companies). Disclaimer: I don't work in the US, so I'm…
Sounds like a two-sided market, where a company gets their value from being able to connect one side (the artists) with the other one (the venues). What I find strange is that people aren't usually reluctant to sign…
My lazy guide: This didn't make my daughter 100% bilingual, but she's up there. We live in a spanish speaking country. Netflix (where she sees all her cartoons and movies) has always been set in English. She's 7 now and…
Also 2 == 2. You're not making an argument, you're just saying that LLMs aren't human.
This comment isn't saying anything. It says "LLMs statistically choose the next token" and, because of that, it can't be anything else. We know how the LLMs were trained, so re-stating it doesn't help in anything. The…
The GP is analyzing some dimensions to figure out if the success of Baldur's Gate is surprising or not. He/she finds that, given the limited dimensions we can consider, the success is surprising. I read your reply as…
This is an old question in economics, but undoubtedly relevant now: "Is this new technology change different or similar to other technology changes?" In other technology changes, there are hundreds of jobs that…
I grew up used to reading subtitles. Listening to the original voices and languages is super interesting to me. Besides some very specific cases (I can't look at the screen all the time) I don't have any use for dubbing.
You're correct. Parent comment says something true (some / many characters don't have a representation in most fonts), but the inference it makes is wrong (this is a bottleneck for communication)