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numeri

495 karmajoined 4 tahun yang lalu

Submissions

Petition for Recognition of Work on Open-Source as Volunteering in Germany

openpetition.de
213 points·by numeri·5 bulan yang lalu·50 comments

Exploration Posteriors for Generative Modeling Using Only Negative Rewards

arxiv.org
1 points·by numeri·5 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Underrated reasons to be thankful V

dynomight.net
226 points·by numeri·8 bulan yang lalu·98 comments

comments

numeri
·3 hari yang lalu·discuss
I've not written up anything, no. I think I'd have a hard time doing so without just feeling like I'm bragging about myself, which I don't like.

There's still a definite gap between me and native speakers, that shows itself primarily in the effort required, but I'm definitely near native (pass as German in all social settings, although an hour long conversation will usually tease it out due to my unfamiliar first name or small-talk topics, rarely but occasionally due to mistakes).

I prepared by doing two practice exams and about 5 filmed and timed practice presentations, and that was over preparing for me. Experiences vary, and I do think I'm a bit towards the outlier side, but it's left me convinced that the whole "native speakers might not pass C2" thing is overblown.
numeri
·3 hari yang lalu·discuss
> Most Germans won't be able to pass a C2 test

That's not true, but it is a commonly shared myth. I've taken and passed C2 with the highest mark in every category (I moved here when I was a young teen, wanted to know if I would pass it after hearing years of people saying things like you're saying).

Most Germans would easily pass C2, although I think they'd have to be well-read/possibly university educated to get high scores (mostly need to be able to read quickly, give a semi-structured presentation and write a persuasive essay).

For what it's worth, I could run linguistic laps around all the other test takers there that day, and I assume at least some of them passed.
numeri
·7 hari yang lalu·discuss
Are you writing general use programs in it, then? Have any good examples?
numeri
·9 hari yang lalu·discuss
A future system that works like you described would be awesome. It'd be like community-sourced peer review (although by community I mean a community of experts in different fields, not arbitrary individuals).

I'd love a statistician's review on a ton of the papers I read.
numeri
·23 hari yang lalu·discuss
The problem is that what people care about are the "black swan" causes of death, i.e., the cases the actuarial table is wrong.
numeri
·24 hari yang lalu·discuss
Prices for training have dropped immensely in terms of research required, code efficiency, algorithmic/sample efficiency, and possibly also hardware (I'm not qualified to say without looking it FLOPS/dollar, or even to be certain that's the right metric here).
numeri
·24 hari yang lalu·discuss
I mean, it might listen to him. We have no clue, which is the problem.
numeri
·24 hari yang lalu·discuss
There's a large gap between making up words and an actually native text distribution. LLMs have a clear pattern, clear tells, a "feel" in English, and it's normally even more pronounced in non-English languages.

Lots of bias towards English sentence structure, idioms, etiquette, etc.
numeri
·26 hari yang lalu·discuss
One context I could imagine is a young person with shaky grasp of English trying to come up with an interesting school/university project via conversations with an LLM set up as an OpenClaw agent.

It's got the right combinations of inexperience, cluelessness, panic, expectations that Westerners are rich, and hopes of others being willing to fix their mistake.
numeri
·28 hari yang lalu·discuss
especially because this is the most painfully glaring flaw in their plan. Their solution is for an inference provider to... store the KV cache (which they can compute!) on-premise, on their own disks, but pay some third party for it?
numeri
·29 hari yang lalu·discuss
I've had it happen. I ran an experiment, taking a couple hours and producing ~2 GiB of files. One of the results looked good, so I told Claude Opus 4.5 (at the time) to commit the code changes, upload the important file to cloud storage, then clean up the rest.

I then saw it run `rm -r results/`, before messaging me: "Now all that's left is for you to upload the successful results, then I'll delete the rest!"

Why did it not upload the files itself, when it had been using the cloud storage CLI during that session? No clue. I do accept that I could have and should have just uploaded the file myself. It would have taken 3 seconds to type.
numeri
·29 hari yang lalu·discuss
To be fair, it is good to know that it disobeys simple instructions like "don't examine my git history" far more than other models. (It should of course be a different benchmark, so as not to conflate things.)

It's not a great sign for alignment.
numeri
·bulan lalu·discuss
I would just warn that you may not be able to recognize what is worth learning at your stage.

Intuition for library design and the architecture of software packages/external APIs is something you can only learn by doing.
numeri
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I have DSPD as well, and was pleasantly surprised to see how much of the article discussed DSPD.

That being said, I do think a lot of what the author is saying flies right in the face of traditional advice, esp. the suggestion that we should all just free-sleep and rotate around the clock. I personally find myself happiest when I'm entrained to the 24-hour cycle, but at my own natural offset. Whenever I've been cycling the day it's felt miserable, uncontrollable and exhausting.

To be fair, the author did claim that you can fully solve this by completely cutting out after-dark electronics, but I've tried pretty intensely to do exactly that for extended periods in the past, and didn't see any progress. I do sleep amazingly when camping, though, and the delay is lesser than normal (still definitely there).
numeri
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
11/20 for qwen/qwen3.5-flash-02-23 in Claude Code, with effort set to low.
numeri
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
No, that's what the headline implies, and the body of the article doesn't support at all. It's (currently, and with no indication of intent to change this) two separate branches of their business.
numeri
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
but Taalas had to quantize Llama 3.1 8B to death to get it to fit. It can't produce coherent non-English text at all.
numeri
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
and if I was to guess, the latest generation of models (Claude Opus 4.6, GPT-5.3-codex, etc.) differ from Opus 4.5, GPT 5.2 primarily in the addition of deeper, more difficult (most likely agentic and coding-based, like Terminal Bench) tasks to their RLVR training.

I could be completely off, as my intuition here is fully based on public research papers, but it seems to explain the current state of things fairly well.
numeri
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
No, Python or units[1] is always a better choice if I'm near a computer (and I nearly always am these days, unfortunately, I suppose). I do have three wonderful slide rules, though.

[1]: https://www.gnu.org/software/units/
numeri
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Introducing a solid zero-knowledge age verification option is the opposite direction of ending anonymity in the Internet, which other parts of the same governments are also working on.

So yeah, I'll gladly trust and cheer on the part working in the right direction.