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jargnar

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Show HN: Orangensaft – A mini Python-like language with LLM eval in lang runtime

github.com
1 points·by jargnar·hace 5 meses·0 comments

I asked Gemini to simulate an advanced Swift/iOS classroom

notes.suhas.org
1 points·by jargnar·el año pasado·1 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by jargnar·hace 4 años·0 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by jargnar·hace 4 años·0 comments

A Road to MLOps Mastery – 2022 Edition

suhas.org
2 points·by jargnar·hace 4 años·0 comments

comments

jargnar
·el año pasado·discuss
A few years ago, I read a book called "Postcapitalist Desire: The Final Lectures". It was the first book I've ever read that follows a very enjoyable format -- a series of conversations between a professor and his students. It made me feel like I was in their classroom too. I enjoyed this format so much back then.

I'm a long time programmer, and recently I've been doing some iOS programming. It suddenly occurred to me today that it'd be great if there was a book-novel which simulates an engaging classroom, and takes you into that world of professor interacting with students.

So, I asked the latest Gemini to write me one. I'm still reading it myself, but I got so excited about it that I'm sharing it here! :-)
jargnar
·hace 4 años·discuss
Simply, as a meta note / rational argument's sake ->

Let's assume X (Smith) makes statement S (X -> S). A few hundreds of years later, Y (Graeber) makes statement S' that refutes S and says Y -> S' and negates ~ (X -> S). Now what I'd expect is a Z, that counter-refutes Y. For example, Z -> S''. Instead, you're going back to saying yeah, we all know X -> S, so how can Y -> S' be ever true...

A starting point for ideas on rational arguments etc is https://www.lesswrong.com/library
jargnar
·hace 4 años·discuss
I'd totally agree with you had Graeber not been an influential anthropologist (wherein one academically studies human activity, culture, trade, economics, social structures, institutions etc. from a rigorous historical lens)
jargnar
·hace 4 años·discuss
> Graeber misinterprets the history and ideas of mainstream economics

Can you provide a well researched body of literature that counters Graeber’s thesis as opposed to just stating an opinion?