It might come as a surprise to you, but "random anonymous users discerning quality" is exactly how this site operates and that's working pretty well.
It is not black or white. Many articles start with a human brainstorming the content, maybe writing a rough draft, and then AI filling gaps or just polishing the language. Maybe the author isn't a native speaker or has…
You can start by reading about Larry Johnson's whistleblower story.
> It's interesting that our laws punish homicide with maximum criminal penalties, but the opposite (keeping someone alive against their wishes) seems to be assault and battery at worst, with much much lighter…
> Why haven't you? It is (mentally) painful to think about that this life is going to end. And even more (mentally) painful to think about the consequences of a (physically) painful end. The mind goes to great lengths…
> The well meaning, naive proponents of legalisation of euthanasia have actually made things a lot harder for those who want it. In your mind, what should have been done instead of legalizing it?
The cryonics industry is an unbelievable scam. You habe watched too much scifi my friend.
I think it's exactly this attitude which the article is about. Of course I wish the best to whoever decides to fight. But fighting at any cost isn't the best advice.
Agreeing with your overall sentiment, but this caught my eye: > If I'm 80, I'm (somewhat) less concerned with length of life, and more concerned with quality. If I'm 50 that's a different equation Why is that? Is…
If anybody is confused what this is about, considering that cellular automata are a thing in CS: This is about cell biology.
> While philosophers like to ignore costs Another word for "cost" is "constraint" and philosophers spend a great amount of effort on thinking about the consequences of constraints. I therefore have no idea where you are…
Easy. Let f be a continuous real function that is not differentiable somewhere. Let H be the truth value of the Riemann hypothesis. Define g(x) as "f(x) if not H else 0". Boom. Reminds me of a homework exercise in…
But maybe it shouldn't. I visit a friend in Sweden the other day. Her house was built in the 80s, nothing fancy, a simple one family house. There is a ventilation system integrated. Every room has an inlet and the air…
Unfortunately it will be hard for you to know how much of that effect is placebo. Unless you tested this with some kind of double-blind setup.
That article's message is spot on. If your CO2 levels are that high then you should fix the HVAC system and get it up to code or lobby for fixing the code. In many countries, a full air exchange in any office space…
> The semantics (or lack thereof) of C and C++ can make this difficult to actually test for because the compiler is allowed to say "test passed" to any input leading to UB. I get what you are saying but does this…
The point I was waiting for but never came, so I'll make it here, is: Will LLMs be able to synthesize? Sure they can learn calculi. Lambda, differential, whatnot. But will Claude eventually be able to come up with a…
But it's quite straight forward to identify that too.
Though some people will train LLMs on it and if it's wrong then it will bias the training outcome towards that incorrectness. But it's not the purpose of a blog post to ensure LLM training data has high quality.
P vs NP all over again.
Though this action drive (and the means he has) could be used for so much better. Humankind's top 10 problems don't include the issue of being confined to a single planet. That far down the list. The actual stuff gets…
A charitable response would be the desire to push the boundaries of what is (or is considered) possible. A less charitable response would be the desire for attention and approval to fill some kind of deeply rooted…
I hope you are planning for a rotating base as a core feature.
> The defense is of course that some people can do that - Musk did it, so why not? If you think that Musk did his endeavors in order to become rich, you are likely mistaken.
Depends what kind of market you are going after. Mass market for end users, sure, your argument applies. But there are lots of other types too.
It might come as a surprise to you, but "random anonymous users discerning quality" is exactly how this site operates and that's working pretty well.
It is not black or white. Many articles start with a human brainstorming the content, maybe writing a rough draft, and then AI filling gaps or just polishing the language. Maybe the author isn't a native speaker or has…
You can start by reading about Larry Johnson's whistleblower story.
> It's interesting that our laws punish homicide with maximum criminal penalties, but the opposite (keeping someone alive against their wishes) seems to be assault and battery at worst, with much much lighter…
> Why haven't you? It is (mentally) painful to think about that this life is going to end. And even more (mentally) painful to think about the consequences of a (physically) painful end. The mind goes to great lengths…
> The well meaning, naive proponents of legalisation of euthanasia have actually made things a lot harder for those who want it. In your mind, what should have been done instead of legalizing it?
The cryonics industry is an unbelievable scam. You habe watched too much scifi my friend.
I think it's exactly this attitude which the article is about. Of course I wish the best to whoever decides to fight. But fighting at any cost isn't the best advice.
Agreeing with your overall sentiment, but this caught my eye: > If I'm 80, I'm (somewhat) less concerned with length of life, and more concerned with quality. If I'm 50 that's a different equation Why is that? Is…
If anybody is confused what this is about, considering that cellular automata are a thing in CS: This is about cell biology.
> While philosophers like to ignore costs Another word for "cost" is "constraint" and philosophers spend a great amount of effort on thinking about the consequences of constraints. I therefore have no idea where you are…
Easy. Let f be a continuous real function that is not differentiable somewhere. Let H be the truth value of the Riemann hypothesis. Define g(x) as "f(x) if not H else 0". Boom. Reminds me of a homework exercise in…
But maybe it shouldn't. I visit a friend in Sweden the other day. Her house was built in the 80s, nothing fancy, a simple one family house. There is a ventilation system integrated. Every room has an inlet and the air…
Unfortunately it will be hard for you to know how much of that effect is placebo. Unless you tested this with some kind of double-blind setup.
That article's message is spot on. If your CO2 levels are that high then you should fix the HVAC system and get it up to code or lobby for fixing the code. In many countries, a full air exchange in any office space…
> The semantics (or lack thereof) of C and C++ can make this difficult to actually test for because the compiler is allowed to say "test passed" to any input leading to UB. I get what you are saying but does this…
The point I was waiting for but never came, so I'll make it here, is: Will LLMs be able to synthesize? Sure they can learn calculi. Lambda, differential, whatnot. But will Claude eventually be able to come up with a…
But it's quite straight forward to identify that too.
Though some people will train LLMs on it and if it's wrong then it will bias the training outcome towards that incorrectness. But it's not the purpose of a blog post to ensure LLM training data has high quality.
P vs NP all over again.
Though this action drive (and the means he has) could be used for so much better. Humankind's top 10 problems don't include the issue of being confined to a single planet. That far down the list. The actual stuff gets…
A charitable response would be the desire to push the boundaries of what is (or is considered) possible. A less charitable response would be the desire for attention and approval to fill some kind of deeply rooted…
I hope you are planning for a rotating base as a core feature.
> The defense is of course that some people can do that - Musk did it, so why not? If you think that Musk did his endeavors in order to become rich, you are likely mistaken.
Depends what kind of market you are going after. Mass market for end users, sure, your argument applies. But there are lots of other types too.