None of the billionaires got that way by throwing money at egg studies. Bold to think they'd just start doing it now. Insurance companies don't fund medical research AFAIK? But if they did, it would be coming out of…
Space is not a hedge against these things. At best it's our final tomb. There is no backup plan.
Then your issue is not the S&P methodology, which despite changes in detail remains, as you've said, aimed at filtering out undesirable companies from the index. Your issue is that you want us to believe your favorite…
Because it's selective, the S&P by definition does not reflect the actual market. It reflects a subset of it. If you're comfortable with this notion of what the S&P does, then you ought to be comfortable with S&P…
> Because the index needs accuracy. No, it doesn't. At least, not the way you are probably defining it. This sounds to me like you may be trying to use the index for something it's not really meant to be used for.
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A business that can bring in a steady $2.5B a year doesn't seem like a bad business to me, so long as they can turn that into a profit. I think there ought to be a recognized place in the ecosystem for this sort of…
I thought the AI art was okay, actually! For AI art. For me it's contextual. In the case of engineering presentations in particular, I'll live with some AI art if it means less reading off of fifteen-bullet-point…
Haven't read the book, but points two and three definitely struck some bells in the back clocktowers of my mind. More generally, reading a bit of Orwell was inescapable in my schooling, but I sought out 1984 myself. I…
Mostly when presented disagreeably. You might reflect upon that.
I've been here longer than you, buddy. I think you're the one that needs to leave.
But you cannot predict a priori what that deterministic output will be – and in a real-life situation you will not be operating in deterministic conditions.
> This bug is categorically distinct from hallucinations. Is it? > after using it for months you get a ‘feel’ for what kind of mistakes it makes, when to watch it more closely, when to give it more permissions or a…
I think it might be a bad thing. I'm no stranger to math or computer science, but even after staring at the front page for a minute I was ready to dismiss this as the ravings of a lunatic. It's like they had the idea of…
Hah! XML strikes again. :-) I understand that Spain was a participant in LexML as well... I gather they've since converted to something else?
1. The Register reports OpenAI is well ahead of Anthropic in B2B contracts. It's Anthropic playing catch-up, not OpenAI. 2. In any case, the announcement strongly suggests that customer acquisition had little to do with…
I hope OpenAI realizes they cannot buy developer goodwill.
I went to a James Gosling talk where he excoriated the Emacs users in his audience for clinging to outdated technology and not using a state-of-the-art IDE. But the IDE he was hawking wasn't Eclipse. I think it was Sun…
As a Mayflower descendant I would scarcely say that. But the fact that you offer cheap platitudes and tales from hundreds of years ago to justify why it's OK to consider why the current bombing and slaughter is good for…
There's no lemonade to be found here at this time. What there is to be found are a bunch of tone-deaf people who seem utterly ignorant and indifferent to the war's reality.
Please do not use the occasion of the death of thousands of Iranians in a war we launched against them as some sort of illustrative point about return to office and birth rates in the West.
1. I don't disagree that attributes have been abused – so have elements – but you yourself identified the right way to use them. Yes, you can inline attributes, but that also leads to a document that's harder to use in…
I disagree on several points here: 1. I think attributes absolutely should exist. They're great for describing metadata related to the tag: e.g. element ID, language, datatype, source annotation, namespacing. They add…
By "parses well" in that case I mean "can identify where the error is, and maybe even infer the missing closing tag if desirable;" i.e. error reporting and recovery. If you've ever debugged a JSON parse error where the…
Depends on the application, I suppose. For OP's application, pulling in XML is no trouble and gives you a much better solution for typed unions. To get better than XML, I think you're looking at something closer to a…
None of the billionaires got that way by throwing money at egg studies. Bold to think they'd just start doing it now. Insurance companies don't fund medical research AFAIK? But if they did, it would be coming out of…
Space is not a hedge against these things. At best it's our final tomb. There is no backup plan.
Then your issue is not the S&P methodology, which despite changes in detail remains, as you've said, aimed at filtering out undesirable companies from the index. Your issue is that you want us to believe your favorite…
Because it's selective, the S&P by definition does not reflect the actual market. It reflects a subset of it. If you're comfortable with this notion of what the S&P does, then you ought to be comfortable with S&P…
> Because the index needs accuracy. No, it doesn't. At least, not the way you are probably defining it. This sounds to me like you may be trying to use the index for something it's not really meant to be used for.
[flagged]
A business that can bring in a steady $2.5B a year doesn't seem like a bad business to me, so long as they can turn that into a profit. I think there ought to be a recognized place in the ecosystem for this sort of…
I thought the AI art was okay, actually! For AI art. For me it's contextual. In the case of engineering presentations in particular, I'll live with some AI art if it means less reading off of fifteen-bullet-point…
Haven't read the book, but points two and three definitely struck some bells in the back clocktowers of my mind. More generally, reading a bit of Orwell was inescapable in my schooling, but I sought out 1984 myself. I…
Mostly when presented disagreeably. You might reflect upon that.
I've been here longer than you, buddy. I think you're the one that needs to leave.
But you cannot predict a priori what that deterministic output will be – and in a real-life situation you will not be operating in deterministic conditions.
> This bug is categorically distinct from hallucinations. Is it? > after using it for months you get a ‘feel’ for what kind of mistakes it makes, when to watch it more closely, when to give it more permissions or a…
I think it might be a bad thing. I'm no stranger to math or computer science, but even after staring at the front page for a minute I was ready to dismiss this as the ravings of a lunatic. It's like they had the idea of…
Hah! XML strikes again. :-) I understand that Spain was a participant in LexML as well... I gather they've since converted to something else?
1. The Register reports OpenAI is well ahead of Anthropic in B2B contracts. It's Anthropic playing catch-up, not OpenAI. 2. In any case, the announcement strongly suggests that customer acquisition had little to do with…
I hope OpenAI realizes they cannot buy developer goodwill.
I went to a James Gosling talk where he excoriated the Emacs users in his audience for clinging to outdated technology and not using a state-of-the-art IDE. But the IDE he was hawking wasn't Eclipse. I think it was Sun…
As a Mayflower descendant I would scarcely say that. But the fact that you offer cheap platitudes and tales from hundreds of years ago to justify why it's OK to consider why the current bombing and slaughter is good for…
There's no lemonade to be found here at this time. What there is to be found are a bunch of tone-deaf people who seem utterly ignorant and indifferent to the war's reality.
Please do not use the occasion of the death of thousands of Iranians in a war we launched against them as some sort of illustrative point about return to office and birth rates in the West.
1. I don't disagree that attributes have been abused – so have elements – but you yourself identified the right way to use them. Yes, you can inline attributes, but that also leads to a document that's harder to use in…
I disagree on several points here: 1. I think attributes absolutely should exist. They're great for describing metadata related to the tag: e.g. element ID, language, datatype, source annotation, namespacing. They add…
By "parses well" in that case I mean "can identify where the error is, and maybe even infer the missing closing tag if desirable;" i.e. error reporting and recovery. If you've ever debugged a JSON parse error where the…
Depends on the application, I suppose. For OP's application, pulling in XML is no trouble and gives you a much better solution for typed unions. To get better than XML, I think you're looking at something closer to a…