The comment thread was about AI, not LLM.
>It's having a general understanding/view of the "baseline", aka healthy anatomy. This is something LLMs will never have You're making the mistake of conflating AI with LLMs. I don't think LLMs will reliably be better…
I've been using openbox for decades now. It doesn't get in the way, and I don't need more.
If something has several clear positive effects, and a possible small, arguably irrelevant, negative effect, most people will agree that yes, it's good for you. It's like trying to argue that running may have a negative…
One of my pet peeves with git (and systems both similar, and based on it) is that automated tests run after you've made the commit and push. In my mind the commit (let alone the push to a publicly accesible server)…
I've been listening to Space Station to flow for more than 20 years.
Sourdough doesn't need to be complicated. You get the starter by leaving flour and water at room temperature for several days. Once the starter is ready, it's just more flour and water, plus additional ingredients…
> and left all their code available, as required by OSS. IANAL, and I don't have a horse in this race, but I don't think that's required by OSS, not by the spirit of "the law", and (at least) not by GPL, MIT, and other…
>Then they added friend lists, status updates, like counts, popularity rankings. That sounds absolutely horrible.
I used to love HN. Lots of interesting stuff, great articles, novel projects. Now it feels like the frontpage is always around 70% LLM-related stuff. And not breakthrough research or projects, just "new Claude version…
>They banned the_donald (which, yes, was spammy, but it seemed to be organic I used to frequent /r/t_d when it was created, before the Republican primaries for the 2016 election. I visited every day because I was…
Muchrooms have mycotoxins too. And red meat is a carcinogen. And predator fish have plenty of heavy metals. And the list goes on and on. Yet we eat all those things. Hence the "net positive".
Most people who fast report that same "clearheadedness".
> you should not eat it all day How sure are we about this? How certain are we that those specific species of mold have a net negative effect, rather than a net positive (like for example mushrooms)? Penicillium grows…
Europe's first mistake was abandoning nuclear energy, and their second mistake was not going all in on renewables.
> I don't understand what you mean by "intellectual mode". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mode_(statistics) If human knowledge were a pyramid, LLMs just make the pyramid flatter, i.e. shorter, wider at the bottom, and…
I think it absolutely is for everyone, especially for introverts. It's a muscle, go train it. Source: me.
That's because you aren't combining it with more advanced commands, or macros. "10j" may sound useless. But "y10j50jp" is much more effective. Put that in a macro that does other stuff too, and suddenly you perform…
That sounds like the perfect thing to do while I'm driving.
> This is why it's impossible to create a digital assistant, or really anything useful, via Markov Chain. The fact that they only generate sequences that existed in the source mean that it will never come up with…
Because it's a type of message, just like "GET" in the context of HTTP.
I've never looked at the source code of a PT, but my understanding is that they also implement heuristics to detect strange behaviors, i.e. clients trying to fake their ratio.
> because clearly keeping us alive after the age of 40 really wasn't _that_ necessary for human survival. That's a very common misconception. Being alive after 40 is quite necessary if you are a member of a gregarious…
There are studies that show that regular sun exposure is correlated with both lower incidence of and lower mortality from melanoma. So as long as you're not getting sum burns, sun exposure is actually better for you. In…
They do the same with emails. I've got emails from them with links to paypal-communication.com. It's stupid.
The comment thread was about AI, not LLM.
>It's having a general understanding/view of the "baseline", aka healthy anatomy. This is something LLMs will never have You're making the mistake of conflating AI with LLMs. I don't think LLMs will reliably be better…
I've been using openbox for decades now. It doesn't get in the way, and I don't need more.
If something has several clear positive effects, and a possible small, arguably irrelevant, negative effect, most people will agree that yes, it's good for you. It's like trying to argue that running may have a negative…
One of my pet peeves with git (and systems both similar, and based on it) is that automated tests run after you've made the commit and push. In my mind the commit (let alone the push to a publicly accesible server)…
I've been listening to Space Station to flow for more than 20 years.
Sourdough doesn't need to be complicated. You get the starter by leaving flour and water at room temperature for several days. Once the starter is ready, it's just more flour and water, plus additional ingredients…
> and left all their code available, as required by OSS. IANAL, and I don't have a horse in this race, but I don't think that's required by OSS, not by the spirit of "the law", and (at least) not by GPL, MIT, and other…
>Then they added friend lists, status updates, like counts, popularity rankings. That sounds absolutely horrible.
I used to love HN. Lots of interesting stuff, great articles, novel projects. Now it feels like the frontpage is always around 70% LLM-related stuff. And not breakthrough research or projects, just "new Claude version…
>They banned the_donald (which, yes, was spammy, but it seemed to be organic I used to frequent /r/t_d when it was created, before the Republican primaries for the 2016 election. I visited every day because I was…
Muchrooms have mycotoxins too. And red meat is a carcinogen. And predator fish have plenty of heavy metals. And the list goes on and on. Yet we eat all those things. Hence the "net positive".
Most people who fast report that same "clearheadedness".
> you should not eat it all day How sure are we about this? How certain are we that those specific species of mold have a net negative effect, rather than a net positive (like for example mushrooms)? Penicillium grows…
Europe's first mistake was abandoning nuclear energy, and their second mistake was not going all in on renewables.
> I don't understand what you mean by "intellectual mode". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mode_(statistics) If human knowledge were a pyramid, LLMs just make the pyramid flatter, i.e. shorter, wider at the bottom, and…
I think it absolutely is for everyone, especially for introverts. It's a muscle, go train it. Source: me.
That's because you aren't combining it with more advanced commands, or macros. "10j" may sound useless. But "y10j50jp" is much more effective. Put that in a macro that does other stuff too, and suddenly you perform…
That sounds like the perfect thing to do while I'm driving.
> This is why it's impossible to create a digital assistant, or really anything useful, via Markov Chain. The fact that they only generate sequences that existed in the source mean that it will never come up with…
Because it's a type of message, just like "GET" in the context of HTTP.
I've never looked at the source code of a PT, but my understanding is that they also implement heuristics to detect strange behaviors, i.e. clients trying to fake their ratio.
> because clearly keeping us alive after the age of 40 really wasn't _that_ necessary for human survival. That's a very common misconception. Being alive after 40 is quite necessary if you are a member of a gregarious…
There are studies that show that regular sun exposure is correlated with both lower incidence of and lower mortality from melanoma. So as long as you're not getting sum burns, sun exposure is actually better for you. In…
They do the same with emails. I've got emails from them with links to paypal-communication.com. It's stupid.