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ldhough

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ldhough
·il y a 2 ans·discuss
I second this, Kagi is amazing.
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
> random factoids

The "random factoids" were verbatim training data though, one of their extractions was >1,000 tokens in length.

> GPT4 never merely regurgitated

I interpreted the claim that it can't "regurgitate training data" to mean that it can't reproduce verbatim a non-trivial amount of its training data. Based on how I've heard the word "regurgitate" used, if I were to rattle off the first page of some book from memory on request I think it would be fair to say I regurgitated it. I'm not trying to diminish how GPT does what it does, and I find what it does to be quite impressive.
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
> They don't regurgitate training data.

While I very much do not think this is all they do, I don't think this statement is correct. Some research indicates that it is not:

https://not-just-memorization.github.io/extracting-training-...

Anecdotally, there were also a few examples I tried earlier this year (on GPT3.5 and GPT4) of being able to directly prompt for training data. They were patched out pretty quick but did work for a while. For example, asking for "fast inverse square root" without specifying anything else would give you the famous Quake III code character for character, including comments.
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
March 14 for me :)
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
I've been having a great time w/ Kagi, absolutely worth the $10/mo.
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
So much better than the alternatives, really hope it starts catching on outside the Clojure ecosystem.
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
That is pretty interesting and also I didn't realize you could share chats like that.

That GPT is so bad at tic-tac-toe and relatively good at other games like chess is one of the main things that contributes to me having a lower opinion of its ability to generalize than I would have otherwise.

I think any human with GPT's abilities in chess (but somehow no prior knowledge of ttt) would have zero issue becoming an expert with a single explanation of the game. Even very young children can learn to play ttt well and at least consistently make valid moves if nothing else.
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
Oddly just like the text version it is still really bad at tic-tac-toe. Gave it a picture of a completed game and "Who won?" It told me "X won with a vertical line through the middle column" when in fact O won and there was only one X in the middle column.

Very impressive with almost everything else I gave it though.
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
> Wildlife identification

Wouldn't say this is super reliable, I gave it a photo of a small squid in my hand and it said it was a baby fish (very obviously was not a fish).
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
Wish edn was more popular outside the Clojure world, it is so much better than the alternatives imo.
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
> "picture" doesn't think of his fellow humans as fully real, thinking people

I can't say I agree, this feels like a very uncharitable reading of his/her posts. Unless it was edited in after the fact they even said "You're absolutely free to believe either way, and I don't want anyone to force you to do anything."

While it would be insulting to call any individual person's preferences a result of brainwashing, I don't think it is a stretch to say that at a societal level preferences are shaped by mass-media and advertising. Improving access to and making people aware of less resource-intensive forms of comfort doesn't have to come from an authoritarian place. One of my major motivations for seeking out a more walkable area was urbanist YouTubers extolling the benefits. I suppose one could argue that things like bike lanes are hurting drivers but if a city's transit priorities stem from local politics and preferences I don't think it can be reasonably argued that making any particular transit method a priority is more authoritarian than another.

> In practice, comfort is mostly a function of stuff.

No question that it is a variable for most people but I'm not sure I buy that it is the most dominant one. All other variables being excluded, time to do what I want is at least as important for me as stuff (luckily I like my job so time/money aren't usually in conflict). And I think for many people "stuff" like cars and nice lawns aren't inherently drivers of comfort, but rather just possible reifications of goals like "pretty yard" or "fast/easy transit," both of which can be realized in less resource intensive ways. For the yard example, that might be a native garden or xeriscape (in some cases there are rules against these, which actually goes against freedom imo).
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
Comfort != "stuff". Yes in some cases stuff brings additional comfort, and what stuff does that varies by person but there isn't anything inherently contradictory in what they said imo.

I moved from an area where I needed a car to an area where I don't and doing so increased my comfort. If areas like this were more accessible I think a lot of people would willingly degrowth and become more comfortable at the same time. Of course people shouldn't be forced to lose their car or move to a denser area if they don't want. And I like my gadgets but it is pretty ridiculous that their lifespans are artificially shortened to prop up profits. I have a computer from 1984 that still works, I would bet a huge amount of money none of the devices I buy today will work in 2062.
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
I've noticed that one of the most common failure patterns I get from GPT4 for code generation is that it incorrectly asserts something and then corrects itself in the same response.

ex: "This code `(some-fn 1 2)` does x because y. That is incorrect because abc"

I wondered if this has to do with common StackOverflow post formats.
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
Definitely not the only one, an entire country decided that durability is important for the $1 denomination, I'll copy what I posted above:

I was recently in El Salvador, which uses the USD as an official currency (alongside BTC lol). Despite using dollars, the $1 coins are used instead of notes almost exclusively for that denomination (mostly presidential dollars and some silver Susan B Anthony dollars). I was curious and did a bit of research, apparently the reason is that because day-to-day transactions are done almost entirely in small amounts of cash the paper notes have a very short lifespan (apparently <1yr) there, while coins will last decades.
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
I was recently in El Salvador, which uses the USD as an official currency (alongside BTC lol). Despite using dollars, the $1 coins are used instead of notes almost exclusively for that denomination (mostly presidential dollars and some silver Susan B Anthony dollars). I was curious and did a bit of research, apparently the reason is that because day-to-day transactions are done almost entirely in small amounts of cash the paper notes have a very short lifespan (apparently <1yr) there, while coins will last decades.
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
I live in DC, it is ridiculously expensive but rent increases are capped, google says the formula is CPI + 2% but no more than 10%/yr. If she stayed in the same unit she might want to make sure her landlord isn't raising her rent illegally.
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
> high manufacturing cost and the necessity for long hospital follow-up

The lead researcher behind the treatment claims the treatment cost under $20k to administer though, and I've never heard of mass production/adoption causing the cost of a product to go up in price (edit: excepting certain luxury goods that go up because they're a status symbol or something), certainly not >20x more... I know nothing about the medical field so I'm open to having my mind changed but that completely defies intuition. After seeing $450 bags of saline on a medical bill I had last year I'm much more inclined to believe they're just price gouging.

> Novartis is also not the only manufacturer providing CAR-T drugs at a high price.

I guess more than one company can do something despicable?

> offer alternative payment programmes

The "alternative payment programme" mentioned is "requiring payment only if the CAR T therapy induces a complete remission by a certain time point after treatment." I'd much rather pay $20k whether it succeeds or fails than $475k if it succeeds and $0 if it fails, if it fails I'm probably dead and don't care very much...
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
Well this is despicable...
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
People might debate how much of the killing was intentional but I wouldn't have thought it controversial to say that American natives, by and large, did not reap the benefits of colonization and actually incurred major losses.
ldhough
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
How is this being downvoted enough to be greyed out?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Population_history_of_the_Indi...