What even is computation? State-based inference. But intelligence itself does not rely on computation, only its biological counterweight seems to and only in certain situations. If Computation is a "Universal Concept" then there are at least 4 or 5 more "Universal Concepts" analogous to intuition and spontaneity.
It's a very good observation. I don't know if I'd call it "forgetfulness" in the context of a current [2026 edition] LLM. They are very good at remembering almost every "thing" that passes a certain token-density threshold, until they hit saturation, and then it's a sheer rockface down to the abyss of unnatural hedging and reconfirmation of basic premises. Some sort of "forgetfulness" as described would introduce more moving parts into the "inference" stage of the running of an LLM, introducing statefulness/state-tracking.
my theory is that the main "cleansing" cycles are complete by this point and then the subtler psychic strata are more gently accessible. Kind of like how a river in the peak of snowmelt will be devastatingly strong and pull everything along with great force, but towards the end of the year the trickle of the stream lets you see the stones and plants under.
Yeah this lightweight startup could really use some guidance on how to make products with global reach it's a pity they don't have any experience with that.
As a Clojurist the standard pattern for ensuring keys-are-set before doing-something is not-as-elegant-as-this. Clojure is full of macros that do useful things :) Simplifying oft-used patterns into compact representations is very on-brand. Plus, you need this like, all the time.
This will eliminate two whole classes of errors:
1) where keys are supplied a value at an undesired nesting-level.
2) where keys are not-yet-set for some other reason.
For the many programmers who have to write in checks and verifications themselves for this, this saves quite a bit of time, removing the interruption from coding and restoring the flow of getting logic-to-symbol.
thank you for your thoughts as disheveled and unorganized as they may be ;)
can you tell me more about what "genres" you work in primarily? for example , when you prompt suno , what are the typical keywords you use to describe the atmosphere, rhythm, key/mood ? as chart-toppers typically fall into a narrow band of genre types.