cdarv.bsky.social
Data Dude, Culinary Entusiast
100 posts
37 followers
70 following
Regular Contributor
Active Commenter
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Hey, not to be that guy, but can we be better than these kind of criticisms?
It's weird. There's plenty to attack him on.
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Once again proving you have the most difficult satire job in the world
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Country loaf is everything sourdough proports to be without any of the nonsense.
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Do you have any resources on how that 50% number is being tracked?
I think it's a volume game. Humans have to put out our own high-quality content and have curated spaces for it.
But what human content is will probably change as our tools become more sophisticated.
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I dont think it's a secret, or hidden, that they have offloaded the math as a function unless they are specific models or trained on a specific math dataset.
What youre exposing with that prompt is the inherent nature of transformer models and how they dont reason.
It really is papered over so far
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#addmepleasechef
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Grinding Gear Games found the right approach with path of exile in my opinion.
Charge for just mtx on wearable esthetics and stash tabs. The rest of the game is left untouched by the payment model and freed up to deliver the game they want.
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What game is this??
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Next level. I've been making compound butters with garlic thyme and salt. That's as far as my laziness let's me get so far.
Haven't made butter in years, maybe it's time to get back into it
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Tour when???
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AI practitioners on this site have a lot of work to do. There's a negative sentiment towards it and it's going to take a lot to show people the benefit of these tools as they get better.
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Open source agent tools are getting really good
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It's a weight lifted off my shoulders. Pairing that with a duration of less negative content and staying informed with primary sources has really made it enjoyable.
I can read about pizza and tech without watching people fight over every headline and troll.
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I have a problem with buying into this as a new paradigm. I think that comes when we have something beyond transformer models.
What they've accomplished is awesome progress wise on inference-time compute. But it's very expensive and opaque.
I think we push as far toward open source as possible.
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I have nothing to add other than I'm continually amazed by how deep the little details go toward telling the story.
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Pepperoni isn't boring at all!
If you're going pineapple, ask around for the best Hawaiian style locally.
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This shouldn't be read like a warning. It's just inevitably going to have some "value" to shareholders. It's how companies think, and they are sinking big money into it.
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Yann may be a bad example because their state of the art llama models are open source to the public.
He's arguing for communities to create their own for their own use. I don't think it's that controversial personally, but I can see where people have a disdain for the idea
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Seeing the nameless king is delightfully confusing
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Do you find it to be a bummer that windsurf now limits the llm calls? Or do you not come near those limits in your coding??
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Even as an AI enthusiast, I never directly use it for writing. I have it maybe flesh out an existing outline to see if I wasn't considering something. Or ask clarifying questions about what I'm presenting.
But the way AI writes is too stilted.
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I think it's maybe 3 things. One they figure it's "free" or "cheap" so it's good enough while artists are rightfully expensive.
2nd is they may not want to use crappy art but they relied on the cheap or free option and are now stuck on a deadline.
Or it's laziness that goes unpunished
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Yes and no, dependent on how it's tokenizing everything. On second look, you're more correct because it's only looking for 1 p, I was thinking of the strawberry test where it's counting letters in a set.