"Similar" is doing substantial work. If this is your only clue, it is likely to mislead you for at least 50% of the game, and I strongly suspect you will have fun anyway :)
Outer Wilds, the video game, does a brilliant job expanding on this theme if you're hungry for more. "There's more to explore here." Warning: progression is gated behind knowledge so spoilers are worse than usual and…
Outer Wilds vibes! I love it! (It's a video game that does a brilliant job touching on similar themes to The Last Question. If you liked The Last Question and can fit a video game into your life, you will probably like…
It is, but he got the macroeconomics backwards so enjoying it on an aesthetic level rather than a mechanical level is still the right choice.
The internet itself went through a similar growth pattern without astroturf. The original users were all researchers, which served as a strong implicit filter, and then the new users were students who had to be taught…
No, that was 4o. Agreed about factual prompts showing less sycophancy in general. Less-factual prompts give it much more of an opening to produce flattery, of course, and since these models tend to deliver bad news in…
Yeah, the heavily distilled models are very bad with hallucinations. I think they use them to cover for decreased capacity. A 1B model will happily attempt the same complex coding tasks as a 1T model but the hard parts…
ChatGPT opened with a "Nope" the other day. I'm so proud of it. https://chatgpt.com/share/6896258f-2cac-800c-b235-c433648bf4...
Good point. Still, I have to imagine that the engines themselves are dual use in some regard. GNSS or spy satellites maybe? These days it seems like everyone and their dog has a GNSS constellation, but it wasn't always…
Yes. The idea was to keep the engines (and engineers) out of the hands of the other likely buyers. You've seen how soviet military surplus gets around: the same channels work for rocket engines, and those engines work…
Offices revalued due to increase in WfH? Those dastardly Democrats must be at it again!
If it were 400BCE they'd blame writing this discovery of yours will create forgetfulness in the learners' souls, because they will not use their memories; they will trust to the external written characters and not…
Academics? Almost all of the free speech complaints I see these days come from the right, from people who would feel insulted if you called them an academic.
> There's no other scalable solution given existing copyright law. (Informercial hands slip on screwdriver) Call Today for our $29.99 special grip that solves all those slippery screwdriver problems you definitely have!…
The feature lag wasn't the problem, the bugs were the problem: the only reliable OpenCL implementation was the one from Nvidia, but this meant it tended to drive people towards Nvidia rather than steal them away.
She turned the company around and got it on the right path, but in interviews I get the feeling that she might also be responsible for the "Hardware 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th.... eh, maybe software can be 5th" culture and…
They can absolutely be recycled, lol.
Nobody cares about preachy commercials, except in that doing the opposite of what they preach makes you edgy and cool. A big celeb getting caught doing something gauche and getting dogpiled in the press? That is what…
It should be. "Allowed in the US" is a bar so low that you can get oil out the end of it.
Oh no. Ohhhh nooooo. No, no, no! Xilinx dev tools are awful. They are the ones who had Windows XP as the only supported dev environment for a product with guaranteed shipments through 2030. I saw Xilinx defend this…
So I knew that AMD's compute stack was a buggy mess -- nobody starts out wanting to pay more for less and I had to learn the hard way how big of a gap there was between AMD's paper specs and their actual offerings --…
Yeah, if this article wanted to be remotely even-handed, examples are plentiful. How many times has the Laffer Curve been trotted out to claim that reducing taxes on rich people will increase receipts, only for it to…
That's like calling Arnold Schwarzenegger a weakling because Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson was stronger.
[flagged]
> given their protection is imperfect and not like actual vaccines Since when were "actual vaccines" anywhere near perfect? The COVID vaccines were unusually good for vaccines, not unusually bad. Even a low-efficacy…
"Similar" is doing substantial work. If this is your only clue, it is likely to mislead you for at least 50% of the game, and I strongly suspect you will have fun anyway :)
Outer Wilds, the video game, does a brilliant job expanding on this theme if you're hungry for more. "There's more to explore here." Warning: progression is gated behind knowledge so spoilers are worse than usual and…
Outer Wilds vibes! I love it! (It's a video game that does a brilliant job touching on similar themes to The Last Question. If you liked The Last Question and can fit a video game into your life, you will probably like…
It is, but he got the macroeconomics backwards so enjoying it on an aesthetic level rather than a mechanical level is still the right choice.
The internet itself went through a similar growth pattern without astroturf. The original users were all researchers, which served as a strong implicit filter, and then the new users were students who had to be taught…
No, that was 4o. Agreed about factual prompts showing less sycophancy in general. Less-factual prompts give it much more of an opening to produce flattery, of course, and since these models tend to deliver bad news in…
Yeah, the heavily distilled models are very bad with hallucinations. I think they use them to cover for decreased capacity. A 1B model will happily attempt the same complex coding tasks as a 1T model but the hard parts…
ChatGPT opened with a "Nope" the other day. I'm so proud of it. https://chatgpt.com/share/6896258f-2cac-800c-b235-c433648bf4...
Good point. Still, I have to imagine that the engines themselves are dual use in some regard. GNSS or spy satellites maybe? These days it seems like everyone and their dog has a GNSS constellation, but it wasn't always…
Yes. The idea was to keep the engines (and engineers) out of the hands of the other likely buyers. You've seen how soviet military surplus gets around: the same channels work for rocket engines, and those engines work…
Offices revalued due to increase in WfH? Those dastardly Democrats must be at it again!
If it were 400BCE they'd blame writing this discovery of yours will create forgetfulness in the learners' souls, because they will not use their memories; they will trust to the external written characters and not…
Academics? Almost all of the free speech complaints I see these days come from the right, from people who would feel insulted if you called them an academic.
> There's no other scalable solution given existing copyright law. (Informercial hands slip on screwdriver) Call Today for our $29.99 special grip that solves all those slippery screwdriver problems you definitely have!…
The feature lag wasn't the problem, the bugs were the problem: the only reliable OpenCL implementation was the one from Nvidia, but this meant it tended to drive people towards Nvidia rather than steal them away.
She turned the company around and got it on the right path, but in interviews I get the feeling that she might also be responsible for the "Hardware 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th.... eh, maybe software can be 5th" culture and…
They can absolutely be recycled, lol.
Nobody cares about preachy commercials, except in that doing the opposite of what they preach makes you edgy and cool. A big celeb getting caught doing something gauche and getting dogpiled in the press? That is what…
It should be. "Allowed in the US" is a bar so low that you can get oil out the end of it.
Oh no. Ohhhh nooooo. No, no, no! Xilinx dev tools are awful. They are the ones who had Windows XP as the only supported dev environment for a product with guaranteed shipments through 2030. I saw Xilinx defend this…
So I knew that AMD's compute stack was a buggy mess -- nobody starts out wanting to pay more for less and I had to learn the hard way how big of a gap there was between AMD's paper specs and their actual offerings --…
Yeah, if this article wanted to be remotely even-handed, examples are plentiful. How many times has the Laffer Curve been trotted out to claim that reducing taxes on rich people will increase receipts, only for it to…
That's like calling Arnold Schwarzenegger a weakling because Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson was stronger.
[flagged]
> given their protection is imperfect and not like actual vaccines Since when were "actual vaccines" anywhere near perfect? The COVID vaccines were unusually good for vaccines, not unusually bad. Even a low-efficacy…