How could the validation layer be affected by the presence of these substrings?
It's also helpful in that you can now take insights from <older concept> and apply it to <popular architecture>. Many things are easier to reason about when framed a little differently.
I don't think it's possible to make everyone happy here. I find it a lot faster and easier to scan the titles when there's more whitespace between them. If they're too close together, I'll end up constantly losing my…
I would say that the interesting part of this article is that you can treat mosquito bites with hyperthermia. Anyone who's had any contact with technology already knows that you can power electronic devices via USB.
Whenever I read about anything self-hosted, it's always about not being reliant on a single third party to provide the services you need. If you control the software and the data, you can easily move everything from one…
Talking about Copilot, not ChatGPT, but it saves so much time when it comes to boilerplate code, naming variables, writing comments/documentation/descriptive error messages. Things that are generally easier to read and…
Everything is hard until you solve it. Some things continue to be hard after they're solved. AGI is not solved, therefore it's hard.
Every token is already being generated with all previously generated tokens as inputs. There's nothing about the architecture that makes this hard. It just hasn't been trained on this kind of task.
You can't even know that other people have it. We just assume they do because they look and behave like us, and we know that we have it ourselves.
Well, that's the goal isn't it? Having AI take over everything that needs doing so that we can focus on doing things we want to do instead.
> If you can quantify the "indirect benefits" I get from services you chose to use without my input, then you can quantify the indirect benefits a lemonade stand gets from the theatre that opened up next to it. Stop…
> My lemonade stand doesn’t owe the cinema you decided to open up next to me any money. Generally, if a private cinema opens up and stays open, it's because they've determined that they profit enough from their direct…
That works for things that only benefit the person directly using the service, and shipping packages would probably be one of those. It doesn't work if you get indirect benefits from other people using the service. For…
You never reach 100% freedom and security. You only approach it asymptotically as you gain more money. So maybe for some, their threshold for "enough" is higher than you think. Maybe for someone else, they just haven't…
The current trend in AI isn't all of AI, and any kind of work with the goal of producing AGI would definitionally be classified as AI.
How could the validation layer be affected by the presence of these substrings?
It's also helpful in that you can now take insights from <older concept> and apply it to <popular architecture>. Many things are easier to reason about when framed a little differently.
I don't think it's possible to make everyone happy here. I find it a lot faster and easier to scan the titles when there's more whitespace between them. If they're too close together, I'll end up constantly losing my…
I would say that the interesting part of this article is that you can treat mosquito bites with hyperthermia. Anyone who's had any contact with technology already knows that you can power electronic devices via USB.
Whenever I read about anything self-hosted, it's always about not being reliant on a single third party to provide the services you need. If you control the software and the data, you can easily move everything from one…
Talking about Copilot, not ChatGPT, but it saves so much time when it comes to boilerplate code, naming variables, writing comments/documentation/descriptive error messages. Things that are generally easier to read and…
Everything is hard until you solve it. Some things continue to be hard after they're solved. AGI is not solved, therefore it's hard.
Every token is already being generated with all previously generated tokens as inputs. There's nothing about the architecture that makes this hard. It just hasn't been trained on this kind of task.
You can't even know that other people have it. We just assume they do because they look and behave like us, and we know that we have it ourselves.
Well, that's the goal isn't it? Having AI take over everything that needs doing so that we can focus on doing things we want to do instead.
> If you can quantify the "indirect benefits" I get from services you chose to use without my input, then you can quantify the indirect benefits a lemonade stand gets from the theatre that opened up next to it. Stop…
> My lemonade stand doesn’t owe the cinema you decided to open up next to me any money. Generally, if a private cinema opens up and stays open, it's because they've determined that they profit enough from their direct…
That works for things that only benefit the person directly using the service, and shipping packages would probably be one of those. It doesn't work if you get indirect benefits from other people using the service. For…
You never reach 100% freedom and security. You only approach it asymptotically as you gain more money. So maybe for some, their threshold for "enough" is higher than you think. Maybe for someone else, they just haven't…
The current trend in AI isn't all of AI, and any kind of work with the goal of producing AGI would definitionally be classified as AI.