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_giorgio_

111 karmajoined 3 anni fa

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_giorgio_
·5 giorni fa·discuss
Where do you buy the open wrt one? EU
_giorgio_
·6 giorni fa·discuss
HP will simply prevent them from buying their head + cartridge bundle. By legal or by controlling more strictly bulk purchases of replacement parts.
_giorgio_
·11 giorni fa·discuss
Nobody talks about the content, so the content is zero.
_giorgio_
·mese scorso·discuss
So the engines have the same size of a disk brake?

That's incredible.
_giorgio_
·mese scorso·discuss
Seems a lot slower with MAX level.
_giorgio_
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Thanks for this.

It's a very beautiful language, it's quite simple, if you like simple.
_giorgio_
·2 mesi fa·discuss
You only (mostly) talk to guys? Waste of time.
_giorgio_
·2 mesi fa·discuss
It's not, because I've never hit my weekly limits because of the very restrictive 5 hours limits. Let's see if I really hit my weekly limits now.

However you see it, it's an improvement for the consumer.
_giorgio_
·4 mesi fa·discuss
That's a super nice story. Sometimes we tend to forget the contributions of AI for the visually impaired or hearing-impaired people—for example, subtitles on Meta glasses or audio descriptions and such.

Wish you the best.
_giorgio_
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Backprop kept producing wins. That bought it time.

“Wait longer” is not a blank check. In 2026, with Meta-scale talent, data, and compute, serious ideas should show strong intermediate results, not just theory.

Time is necessary, but it is not evidence. More compute does not replace insight, but it does speed up falsification.

So no, skepticism is not naive. If a research program still cannot point to a clear empirical advantage after years, “it just needs more time” stops sounding like science and starts sounding like insulation from the scoreboard.
_giorgio_
·4 mesi fa·discuss
He has coauthored tens of papers on the same subject.

This means sponsorships, millions spent on training etc.
_giorgio_
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Often I don’t purchase anything because I have to sift through a billion different options.

Model identifiers are often unique to specific stores, because they carry laptop configurations made just for them.

Apple, AmazonBasics, and a few others, by contrast, understand the consumer and offer a very limited—though often configurable—selection.
_giorgio_
·4 mesi fa·discuss
LeCun has had every advantage imaginable — and the scoreboard remains empty.

He joined Facebook (now Meta) in December 2013. That's over 12 years of access to one of the largest AI labs in the world, near-unlimited compute, and some of the best researchers money can buy.

He introduced I-JEPA in 2023, nearly 3 years ago. It was supposed to represent a fundamental shift in how machines learn — moving beyond generative models toward a deeper, more structured world understanding.

And yet: I-JEPA hasn't decisively beaten existing models on any major benchmark. No Meta product uses JEPA as a core approach. The research community hasn't adopted it — the field keeps pushing on LLMs and diffusion models. There's been no "GPT moment" for JEPA, no single result that made its value obvious to everyone.

So the question becomes simple: how many years, how many resources, and how many failed proof-of-concepts does it take before we're allowed to judge whether an idea actually works?
_giorgio_
·4 mesi fa·discuss
If his ideas had real substance, we would have seen substantial results by now. He introduced I-JEPA in 2023, so almost three years ago at this point.

If he still hasn’t produced anything truly meaningful after all these years at Meta, when is that supposed to happen? Yann LeCun has been at Facebook/Meta since December 2013.

Your chronological sequence is interesting, but it refers to a time when the number of researchers and the amount of compute available were a tiny fraction of what they are today.
_giorgio_
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Thinking Machines looks half-dead already.

The giant seed round proves investors were willing to fund Mira Murati, not that the company had built anything durable.

Within months, it had already lost cofounder Andrew Tulloch to Meta, then cofounders Barret Zoph and Luke Metz plus researcher Sam Schoenholz to OpenAI; WIRED also reported that at least three other researchers left. At that point, citing it as evidence of real competitive momentum feels weak.
_giorgio_
·4 mesi fa·discuss
I can’t reconcile this dichotomy: most of the landmark deep learning papers were developed with what, by today’s standards, were almost ridiculously small training budgets — from Transformers to dropout, and so on.

So I keep wondering: if his idea is really that good — and I genuinely hope it is — why hasn’t it led to anything truly groundbreaking yet? It can’t just be a matter of needing more data or more researchers. You tell me :-D
_giorgio_
·4 mesi fa·discuss
People where using it to run webservers behind a Mullvad VPN?

It's quite bad not having a port forward when filesharing though.
_giorgio_
·4 mesi fa·discuss
I haven't tried Ghostty yet, but for a windows user the combo:

wt.exe https://apps.microsoft.com/detail/9n0dx20hk701?hl=en-US&gl=U...

pwsh.exe https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/scripting/insta...

is really powerful, it has finally driven me away from conemu, which was really bad with claude (lots of fonts problems).
_giorgio_
·4 mesi fa·discuss
I can't believe that people can't simply accept gifts.
_giorgio_
·5 mesi fa·discuss
I have no idea what you're talking about.

I'm just saying that AI critics like to say that they don't like AI, and to prove their point they constantly move up their definition of "good enough", and when and AI reaches that objective, they change their definition of good enough.