Routing tasks to models by complexity like a job for a LLM. I'm sure there are degenerate cases, but I'd bet a relatively small model could do the job.
That's actually an important part of the theory of Roko's Basilisk. The danger of being tortured only applies to those who are aware of it. Supposedly, the incentive to torture you only exists if you were aware of the…
> Once you're around 80 it'll wake up anyone Source? I haven't been able to find info on this. I get resuls on nocturnal tachycardia and such. Nothing on elevating a sleeping person's heart rate and observing the…
With respect to this idea, I'm not particularly interested in either of those goals. More the general longevity and health improvements that come with regular exercise irrespective of weight loss or muscle gain [1]. I…
Well, it's causing muscle contractions. At high enough intensity, it should raise your heart rate. It's just a matter of what intensity level is tolerable during sleep (and the effect on sleep quality), no?
I'd love to find out if electrical muscle stimulation while sleeping could effectively provide exercise without causing excessive sleep disruption. Could be a zero-effort supplemental form of exercise for sedentary…
Interesting, I've got a Sony Google TV and it's been the best smart TV experience I've had in a long time. Prior to that was Samsung TVs and a Roku TV (forget which manufacturer) and they all had massive decay in…
Interesting, thanks for the info! Another question: how does this approach compare to trying to repair the pathogenic variants in the cancer? I asked here about that approach recently and the response was mainly about…
> Indeed, there's no "be a better/stronger cancer and spread more effectively to more hosts" the way there is with bacteria or a virus. The rare exception: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clonally_transmissible_cancer
Depending on how the LNPs are designed, would resistance also potentially cripple the cancer cells? Like, it stops surfacing some cholesterol receptor because the drug is being delivered by LNPs that target that…
_RelationshipBackPopulatesArgument = Union[ str, PropComparator[Any], Callable[[], Union[str, PropComparator[Any]]], ]
Seems like that's... one more substantive meeting? First link is announcing the initiative was submitted, second is a private meeting where the initiative was presented to the comission by the organizers. Then there was…
If a game is popular enough for anyone to care, some turbonerd will get the server running on a massive cloud instance, and then people will be able to play the game. Fans have reverse-engineered and stood up servers…
> but not the EU which is currently being drafted (in a different direction) Where can we find information about the direction the EU is going on this? AFAICT there has just been one meeting on the topic?
Imagine if every tweet had to go through a one-at-a-time queue before being persisted. There's about 6000 tweets per second, so you would have to be able to save them at <0.17ms per tweet or else you would become…
So for masses of solid tissue, we can't effectively deliver the payload to all the cells? How about for lymphomas?
> You'll note that even Java now recognises that "public static void main(String[] args)" was pointless ceremony. There is still the part of the ceremony that actually mattered: having a single entrypoint instead of the…
What's the status of just using CRISPR to fix pathogenic variants?
Plug for my buddy's project: http://agentsh.org/ Block agents from misbehaving at the OS level instead of asking them to behave.
See also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-stranded_RNA_activated_... This one is quite tinfoil-hat inspiring, as the research was moved to defense-focused Draper Labs and then immediately disappeared.
I know a an accomplished CS professor, ACM fellow, cited in Knuth's TAOCP (as well as being an easter egg!), who still hunt-and-pecks. In fact, hunt-an-pecks incredibly slowly. Seeing him type really reinforced this…
A lot of really good reasons: 1) Higher level code is easier for LLMs to review and iterate upon. The more the intent is clear from the code, the easier it is for humans and LLMs to work with. 2) LLMs get stuck or fail…
Well, assembly languages are generally Turing complete. Not sure what the parallel would be in proof engines.
Ironic, you've got some typos but make a good point :)
Damn, maybe I can throw an agent at trying to unlock IMEI spoofing on my Unifi LTE modem. That one guy on twitter who does all the LTE modem unlocking never replied to my tweet :(
Routing tasks to models by complexity like a job for a LLM. I'm sure there are degenerate cases, but I'd bet a relatively small model could do the job.
That's actually an important part of the theory of Roko's Basilisk. The danger of being tortured only applies to those who are aware of it. Supposedly, the incentive to torture you only exists if you were aware of the…
> Once you're around 80 it'll wake up anyone Source? I haven't been able to find info on this. I get resuls on nocturnal tachycardia and such. Nothing on elevating a sleeping person's heart rate and observing the…
With respect to this idea, I'm not particularly interested in either of those goals. More the general longevity and health improvements that come with regular exercise irrespective of weight loss or muscle gain [1]. I…
Well, it's causing muscle contractions. At high enough intensity, it should raise your heart rate. It's just a matter of what intensity level is tolerable during sleep (and the effect on sleep quality), no?
I'd love to find out if electrical muscle stimulation while sleeping could effectively provide exercise without causing excessive sleep disruption. Could be a zero-effort supplemental form of exercise for sedentary…
Interesting, I've got a Sony Google TV and it's been the best smart TV experience I've had in a long time. Prior to that was Samsung TVs and a Roku TV (forget which manufacturer) and they all had massive decay in…
Interesting, thanks for the info! Another question: how does this approach compare to trying to repair the pathogenic variants in the cancer? I asked here about that approach recently and the response was mainly about…
> Indeed, there's no "be a better/stronger cancer and spread more effectively to more hosts" the way there is with bacteria or a virus. The rare exception: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clonally_transmissible_cancer
Depending on how the LNPs are designed, would resistance also potentially cripple the cancer cells? Like, it stops surfacing some cholesterol receptor because the drug is being delivered by LNPs that target that…
_RelationshipBackPopulatesArgument = Union[ str, PropComparator[Any], Callable[[], Union[str, PropComparator[Any]]], ]
Seems like that's... one more substantive meeting? First link is announcing the initiative was submitted, second is a private meeting where the initiative was presented to the comission by the organizers. Then there was…
If a game is popular enough for anyone to care, some turbonerd will get the server running on a massive cloud instance, and then people will be able to play the game. Fans have reverse-engineered and stood up servers…
> but not the EU which is currently being drafted (in a different direction) Where can we find information about the direction the EU is going on this? AFAICT there has just been one meeting on the topic?
Imagine if every tweet had to go through a one-at-a-time queue before being persisted. There's about 6000 tweets per second, so you would have to be able to save them at <0.17ms per tweet or else you would become…
So for masses of solid tissue, we can't effectively deliver the payload to all the cells? How about for lymphomas?
> You'll note that even Java now recognises that "public static void main(String[] args)" was pointless ceremony. There is still the part of the ceremony that actually mattered: having a single entrypoint instead of the…
What's the status of just using CRISPR to fix pathogenic variants?
Plug for my buddy's project: http://agentsh.org/ Block agents from misbehaving at the OS level instead of asking them to behave.
See also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-stranded_RNA_activated_... This one is quite tinfoil-hat inspiring, as the research was moved to defense-focused Draper Labs and then immediately disappeared.
I know a an accomplished CS professor, ACM fellow, cited in Knuth's TAOCP (as well as being an easter egg!), who still hunt-and-pecks. In fact, hunt-an-pecks incredibly slowly. Seeing him type really reinforced this…
A lot of really good reasons: 1) Higher level code is easier for LLMs to review and iterate upon. The more the intent is clear from the code, the easier it is for humans and LLMs to work with. 2) LLMs get stuck or fail…
Well, assembly languages are generally Turing complete. Not sure what the parallel would be in proof engines.
Ironic, you've got some typos but make a good point :)
Damn, maybe I can throw an agent at trying to unlock IMEI spoofing on my Unifi LTE modem. That one guy on twitter who does all the LTE modem unlocking never replied to my tweet :(