> What service does ham radio actually provide to society? Ham radio allows the public to use slices of the radio spectrum. If someone wanted to "hack" on RF projects, what should this person do if the entire spectrum…
Reading this headline has hit me unexpectedly hard :( Black banner please.
It's true, this will certainly not be a high speed network as 2.7 kHz is the max allowed bandwidth (compared 500 kHz for LoRa). But it should be fast enough for transmitting text messages. Antenna size is problematic,…
> The mostly unpredictable and extremely low duty cycle modes of non-line of sight VHF/UHF propagation like tropospheric ducting are not a realistic option for communications networks. Alternately the more reliable…
> Humans "hallucinate" in the AI sense (it's an awful word that obscures how often we do it) all the time too. Agreed. I'd like to add another point to the discussion. It seems to me, as if LLMs are held to a higher…
> I don't understand the "coincidentally" argument. Nothing is coincidental about those models. They were designed after processes in the brain. They underwent rigorous training to generate a function that…
> because they have not been engineered The fundamental concept behind LLMs is to allow the model to autonomously deduce concepts, rather than explicitly engineering solutions into the system.
This paper highlights a crucial aspect of evaluating AI language models: the significance of prompt construction (e.g. adding "think step by step"). When a model is given insufficient context beyond the question, it may…
Not everyone is trolling on the internet my fellow human. > This is why I am pretty sure you're trolling. This is a lot like saying "You can make GPT-4 do prime factorisation of a semiprime by noting the constituent…
> He broke in to an MIT networking closet (he was never a student there) and connected his equipment to the network. The closet was unlocked and he used a regular guest access to the MIT network. Also he was downloading…
> But it's incorrect to say that they pass every test. Interesting! So there is published evidence, that it cannot pass novel Winograd schemas? Could you please provide me with the sources? I would like to have a look…
> I think not much thought was given to explain the answers in depth since the main point was to show where GPTs reasoning was lacking. Funnily enough it seems as if the prof has also fallen for a reasoning error then.…
Anyone had a look at those questions? > Question 2: In a country where everyone is identical, 100 people wait in line each day to buy raspberries at a controlled price. The government has decided to hand out free coffee…
I am pretty sure that the development of a consciousness in coming LLMs is unavoidable. A consciousness is just another useful abstraction for making precise predictions about the world. The big question will be: How do…
> the real surprise is that language conveys concepts better than we previously thought? Is it really that much of a surprise? Isn't the whole purpose of language to transport concepts? I mean, our brains are not…
I've been thinking a lot about the ability of neural networks to develop understanding and wanted to share my perspective on this. For me it seems absolutely necessary for a NN to develop an understanding of its…
> What service does ham radio actually provide to society? Ham radio allows the public to use slices of the radio spectrum. If someone wanted to "hack" on RF projects, what should this person do if the entire spectrum…
Reading this headline has hit me unexpectedly hard :( Black banner please.
It's true, this will certainly not be a high speed network as 2.7 kHz is the max allowed bandwidth (compared 500 kHz for LoRa). But it should be fast enough for transmitting text messages. Antenna size is problematic,…
> The mostly unpredictable and extremely low duty cycle modes of non-line of sight VHF/UHF propagation like tropospheric ducting are not a realistic option for communications networks. Alternately the more reliable…
> Humans "hallucinate" in the AI sense (it's an awful word that obscures how often we do it) all the time too. Agreed. I'd like to add another point to the discussion. It seems to me, as if LLMs are held to a higher…
> I don't understand the "coincidentally" argument. Nothing is coincidental about those models. They were designed after processes in the brain. They underwent rigorous training to generate a function that…
> because they have not been engineered The fundamental concept behind LLMs is to allow the model to autonomously deduce concepts, rather than explicitly engineering solutions into the system.
This paper highlights a crucial aspect of evaluating AI language models: the significance of prompt construction (e.g. adding "think step by step"). When a model is given insufficient context beyond the question, it may…
Not everyone is trolling on the internet my fellow human. > This is why I am pretty sure you're trolling. This is a lot like saying "You can make GPT-4 do prime factorisation of a semiprime by noting the constituent…
> He broke in to an MIT networking closet (he was never a student there) and connected his equipment to the network. The closet was unlocked and he used a regular guest access to the MIT network. Also he was downloading…
> But it's incorrect to say that they pass every test. Interesting! So there is published evidence, that it cannot pass novel Winograd schemas? Could you please provide me with the sources? I would like to have a look…
> I think not much thought was given to explain the answers in depth since the main point was to show where GPTs reasoning was lacking. Funnily enough it seems as if the prof has also fallen for a reasoning error then.…
Anyone had a look at those questions? > Question 2: In a country where everyone is identical, 100 people wait in line each day to buy raspberries at a controlled price. The government has decided to hand out free coffee…
I am pretty sure that the development of a consciousness in coming LLMs is unavoidable. A consciousness is just another useful abstraction for making precise predictions about the world. The big question will be: How do…
> the real surprise is that language conveys concepts better than we previously thought? Is it really that much of a surprise? Isn't the whole purpose of language to transport concepts? I mean, our brains are not…
I've been thinking a lot about the ability of neural networks to develop understanding and wanted to share my perspective on this. For me it seems absolutely necessary for a NN to develop an understanding of its…