HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

dryarzeg

213 karmajoined hace 7 meses

Submissions

Testing Isn't Everything (2019)

arp242.net
2 points·by dryarzeg·hace 20 días·3 comments

"Optimal Cognitive Core"- specialized 1.7B model for grounded question answering

huggingface.co
6 points·by dryarzeg·el mes pasado·0 comments

Step 3.7 Flash – 198B-A11B MoE vision-language model

huggingface.co
5 points·by dryarzeg·el mes pasado·0 comments

Rotary GPU: Exploring Local Execution for Large MoE Models Under Limited VRAM

arxiv.org
41 points·by dryarzeg·el mes pasado·4 comments

Trump: "We're fighting wars. We can't take care of day care"

cnn.com
21 points·by dryarzeg·hace 3 meses·11 comments

Uvwatauavawh – Meet the Pushy String (2013)

hexacorn.com
2 points·by dryarzeg·hace 3 meses·0 comments

European Commission investigating breach after Amazon cloud account hack

bleepingcomputer.com
3 points·by dryarzeg·hace 4 meses·1 comments

Ubuntu wants to strip some of GRUB features in 26.10 for security purposes

discourse.ubuntu.com
52 points·by dryarzeg·hace 4 meses·44 comments

Does AI have human-level intelligence? (Nature Comment)

nature.com
3 points·by dryarzeg·hace 5 meses·0 comments

comments

dryarzeg
·hace 21 horas·discuss
Now, allow me to introduce you to the ID verification. Insert your biometric passport to proceed. /j
dryarzeg
·ayer·discuss
Don't give them clues, please /s
dryarzeg
·hace 3 días·discuss
> Try asking Chinese models about Taiwan independence or Falun Gong or the Dalai Lama or Tiananmen or the Hong Kong national security law or ASIO’s investigations into Chinese interference in Australian politics

It depends "where" you're asking. In most cases (like with DeepSeek or Z.AI models) it will gladly tell you everything (though it can hallucinate sometimes; I guess they try to filter out such data out of the training datasets) if it's not deployed on Chinese servers and you control the system prompt. So, I guess that these guardrails - probably built into the system prompt - are deployed only on China-controlled inference servers, outside of them models are pretty much talkative.

Well, at least that was my experience. Maybe yours is different for some reasons (like temperature settings or something else), I don't know.
dryarzeg
·hace 3 días·discuss
> Is seeing people talking about the things they don’t like something that makes you unhappy? Why?

Probably (I'm just assuming) because that person observes negative/cautious/"I don't like this because X and Y and also Z"/etc sentiment too much and feels like people are only quick to notice issues while forgetting about good sides.

It's only an assumption, though.
dryarzeg
·hace 5 días·discuss
Not that I'm too sure about how this applies (or whether it applies at all) to other people as well, but for me personally it's easier to recall information about the band if I'm being told the band's name instead of being told "well, they are known for coloured ties". So, there is certainly some kind of effect described in action.

Now, about alphabet: again, I think it's only me, but when I try to recall it backwards, I can't do that easily. I mean, I can recall it backwards, but I need more time to do that. It's harder. I'm not sure if it's because A links to B, B to C, then C to D and not backwards, or maybe just because in school you learn alphabet from A to Z and not from Z to a - so you're kind of trained to recall it A-->Z way - but it's certainly harder for me.

At the end of the day, though, I think that everyone thinks differently. Everyone is having different internal representations for concepts (such as alphabet), so it’s not surprising that this effect may work differently for different people, or not work at all.
dryarzeg
·hace 9 días·discuss
> would definitely affect local AI

And not only. Given your example with 300W, it will affect even things like (somewhat advanced) home servers, (mostly) personal self-hosting machines and even just gaming PCs. That would affect way too much, if I understood your thought correctly.
dryarzeg
·hace 10 días·discuss
[flagged]
dryarzeg
·hace 10 días·discuss
> Android users need to switch to Graphene.

Doesn't GrapheneOS supports only Google Pixel smartphones now? For most of the users, that would mean changing their phones beforehand. And if we're talking about common people (especially not in US), it's not even everyone who can afford that. Moreover, in my opinion, by buying Google phones you're feeding Google, and I, personally, would like to avoid that.
dryarzeg
·hace 11 días·discuss
Have you read the next paragraph?

> I suspect there are as-yet undiscovered effects which shape the next generation. Whether that be DNA methylation, gut bacteria passing from mother to child, selection of the 'correct' egg or sperm out of millions, or something new and un-discovered etc.

I can't see where it mentions "creationism".
dryarzeg
·hace 12 días·discuss
So... is this literally a... umm, sorry, I'm just genuinely (really, no sarcasm intended) which terminology to use... finetune of DeepSeek V4-Pro or post-trained version of DeepSeek V4-Pro Base? Because I haven't fully dived into the tech report (so I may update my opinion as well as my comment), but this far the architectural solutions seem to be largely similar to DeepSeek ones.

Maybe I'm wrong, but that's just the first impression.

EDIT: I take my words back (which happens rarely) - although they do build upon DeepSeek's work, their contribution far exceeds merely post-training the base model in a different way. They did introduce something new to the architecture, though I still can't find the full tech report, with Hugging Face and GitHub links returning 404 right now.

EDIT-2: Now when I think about it, I'm not quite sure if they're going to release in the open the full report with methodology, as well as the model weights, at all.
dryarzeg
·hace 19 días·discuss
Well, that makes some sense. My friends tried some bridges as well, but some of them didn't work from the beginning, while others got blocked (probably; the exact reason why they don't work anymore is unknown) later.
dryarzeg
·hace 19 días·discuss
Thank you for sharing the reliable information from (well, at least somewhat) official source.
dryarzeg
·hace 19 días·discuss
I guess that author mentions it explicitly:

> In dynamic languages like Ruby and Python tests are important for a different reason

> tests are important
dryarzeg
·hace 20 días·discuss
> Now I can generate that same monstrosity on my own.

For what? Why would you need to?

> I've created a 1.1m+ loc and growing trading platform that automates options trades based on live ML edges from research papers.

Sounds like a lot of "if/else" /j
dryarzeg
·hace 21 días·discuss
> If there's one thing we can be sure about it's that people starving in Africa are not starving because an American got themselves a new lawn mower.

Exactly what I think, personally.
dryarzeg
·hace 21 días·discuss
Now that (abandoning the efforts to block Tor so now it mostly works) sounds like some good news to me! Can you please share your settings or what exactly you use that works for you? Perhaps they will help my friends, too, because previously, they relied on Tor to circumvent the "network blockade", but it just stopped working for them at some point. And yes, they tried to play with settings as well but it didn't really help.

By the way, the level of ban enforcement can also vary from region to region regardless of ISPs (at least that's what I heard from some people), but anyway...
dryarzeg
·hace 21 días·discuss
> But it's important to remember that avoiding restrictions gets harder and harder every year.

Yes, that's right. Now the only reliable protocols to communicate with my friends in Russia seem to be e-mail ones like SMTP, because everything else constantly gets interrupted if not blocked completely. The only thing we can hope for here is that sooner or later, that hell will finally end; we just need to do what we do.

> I just don't understand why some other people in such discussions still think that its only about children and weigh pro and cons when they have an actual example of all these things being implemented.

Maybe I'm being kind of rude, but to me that seems just like... for the lack of better words, it seems like they're in denial. In a psychological sense, I mean.
dryarzeg
·hace 21 días·discuss
I know all of that. I'm a native Russian speaker and I have quite a lot of Russian friends, I'm pretty well aware of the situation. Nevertheless, despite all the government’s efforts and the enormous amount of money invested in this, there are still - at least for now - ways to bypass the blocks even there. I suspect that as long as they don’t physically cut the cables, there will always be ways to circumvent censorship. And yes, I’m not talking about carrier pigeons :)

So I hope that in the UK and other European countries, by drawing on Russia’s existing experience, people will be able to adapt to these restrictions before they become too severe. Of course, the government could also adopt Russia’s approach right away, but that’s unlikely, as it would provoke far too much resistance from citizens - they aren’t used to that level of restriction. If Europe does indeed continue moving in this direction, everything will happen gradually, just as it did in Russia; no one will roast a frog with a flamethrower - they’ll cook it according to the classic recipe, so to speak.
dryarzeg
·hace 21 días·discuss
Hmm... That's interesting. Maybe that depends on ISP, because my friends have told me they can't use Tor because they can't even bootstrap, even if they're using bridges.
dryarzeg
·hace 21 días·discuss
Then I should assume that your "inference" ignores common sense, because nowhere in my comments was I praising some governments, either Russian or European, for their action. I merely pointed out that now, probably, some people from Europe may try to apply Russian experience at circumventing censorship, bans and "network blockades". That's a good thing in the context of this whole situation, because you don't have to figure everything out on your own, from the ground up - you already have some practical examples, researches, and, what's more important - allies. Maybe I'm dramatizing a bit here, but the way was already paved out - you just have to follow the path.

Now could you, please, show to me where exactly was I saying something positive about governments?

From my personal point of view and from my own experience, you have to look for positives if it's possible. The fact that you're still alive is already a positive, even if you're underground taking cover from bombshells and thinking that you may die tomorrow. If you're not looking for positive, you will loose your will to live and, eventually, you will die. Maybe that's making me look too optimistic, but for me that's literally the matter of survival. Sorry if my position was not clear from the beginning.