The big benefit in my experience was that I could have a program with real users, that did have errors (from me being new to Elixir and not knowing better) and still not experiencing downtime. Instead, CPU or Memory…
I wish the nix programming language wasn't so rough because it can be pretty great at this problem. Being able to compile from source while just listing out package dependencies is powerful.
Hmm... Earlier today I asked "Are you Gemini pro?" And it answered word-for-word the same way. Is this a hard-coded or heavily prompt-coached answer? It's suspicious when an AI answers 100% the same.
Yep, prototype exactly that this past week. With a strong instruction spec prompt from the start, you can have an AI come up with a much better answer by making sure it knows it has time to answer the questions and how…
It seems plausible you could have the LLM side call upon its knowledge of known problems and answers to quiz the q-learning side. While this would still rely on a knowledge base in the LLM, I would imagine it could…
The big benefit in my experience was that I could have a program with real users, that did have errors (from me being new to Elixir and not knowing better) and still not experiencing downtime. Instead, CPU or Memory…
I wish the nix programming language wasn't so rough because it can be pretty great at this problem. Being able to compile from source while just listing out package dependencies is powerful.
Hmm... Earlier today I asked "Are you Gemini pro?" And it answered word-for-word the same way. Is this a hard-coded or heavily prompt-coached answer? It's suspicious when an AI answers 100% the same.
Yep, prototype exactly that this past week. With a strong instruction spec prompt from the start, you can have an AI come up with a much better answer by making sure it knows it has time to answer the questions and how…
It seems plausible you could have the LLM side call upon its knowledge of known problems and answers to quiz the q-learning side. While this would still rely on a knowledge base in the LLM, I would imagine it could…