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greazy

1,063 karmajoined 6 anni fa

Submissions

Animations in my Google Slides game are SUPER tedious and long

old.reddit.com
3 points·by greazy·mese scorso·0 comments

List of Common Misconceptions (Wikipedia)

en.wikipedia.org
7 points·by greazy·7 mesi fa·2 comments

Video: Intro to Unix – Uni Melbourne Department of Comp Sci Training (1982) [video]

youtube.com
1 points·by greazy·9 mesi fa·0 comments

My game's server is blocked in Spain whenever there's a football match on

old.reddit.com
431 points·by greazy·10 mesi fa·226 comments

comments

greazy
·3 giorni fa·discuss
Which distro are you running? Perchance did you run the shell script in alpine Linux (docker)?
greazy
·9 giorni fa·discuss
I never considered the two are linked. Any research or modeling that shows this is true? Is it generalisable to other countries...
greazy
·10 giorni fa·discuss
It appears the scientists or someone close to them have created a wiki https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SpudCell

I don't think I've ever seen researchers do PR like this directly. Interesting approach, will it become the norm?
greazy
·14 giorni fa·discuss
I think you forgot to post a link?
greazy
·16 giorni fa·discuss
Posit (previously RStudio) has a few tools to easy dependency problems such as rig.

Ive switched completely to conda handling my deps for R. Especially nicer on Linux systems as the packages are preinstalled.
greazy
·16 giorni fa·discuss
Bioconductor (another R package repo) has stricter rules for submissions, such as minimum requirements for documentation.

CRAN should adopt the same set approach. Even widely used historical packages can be light on docs.
greazy
·22 giorni fa·discuss
Clever joke. FYI Mousa is the Arabic pronunciation of Moses.
greazy
·29 giorni fa·discuss
> There is an interesting third group emerging: People who acknowledge the quality problem, but think they can deal with it by applying more AI to the output.

Ah yes, the known unknowns.

The discussion reminds me of a talk Zizek gave in which he discusses the speech Rumsfeld gave regarding the evidence Iraq supplying weapons to terrorist[0].

Zezik argues the unknown knowns are far more interesting (and the reason why USA was losing in Iraq). While Rumsfeld focused on the unknown unknowns.

I've noticed that domain experts who implicitly know the the known unknowns of their field distrust LLMs because they can identify their shortcomings. Those subtle mistakes LLMs make. I argue this is why domain experts using LLMs get such a boost. They can identify and avoid pitfalls sometimes before they happen. But in other fields the same people are in awe of LLM capabilities precisely because the known unknowns are a mystery.

The Unknown Unknowns of LLMs are the IMO the most interesting. The so called emergent capabilities of the technology. The use of LLMs in others fields such as biology, eg in protein language models, is really cool.

Everyone focuses on replacement of people workers when I think opening new fields of work for humans should be the goal of LLMs by leveraging the tech to discover.

The other interesting caregory is unknown knows. But that's another topic for another time.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/There_are_unknown_unknowns
greazy
·mese scorso·discuss
What is your ERM of choices? Opinion on EPIC?
greazy
·mese scorso·discuss
Great article.

While the definition changes, the expertise shifts and with it the field. Computers eventually became statisticians and data scientists. Printers became graphic designers.

What I found most interesting is that when positions undergo such evolution (printer -> graphic designer), a number of skills which were previously different expertise altogether, combine to create a new field. In other words, a new multidisciplinary field is born.

I think a good example is data science, the field at it's core is applied statistics using modern techniques such as data management and computing [0].

The question is, what is the new evolution of a programmer? Lots of folks like to use the term "engineer", and previously I thought this was silly. But now with LLMs, maybe that is a good descriptor; software engineer.

[0] https://www.welcometothejungle.com/en/articles/story-origin-...
greazy
·mese scorso·discuss
Agreed, the paper describing the methodology uses basic techniques, no mention of AI or LLM usage.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41541-024-00950-9

Its bizarre and even frustrating to see basic bioinformatics methodology referred to as AI.

AI had become a catch all term for... Everything.
greazy
·mese scorso·discuss
Notification requests add to decision fatigue, which can lead to bad things.
greazy
·mese scorso·discuss
https://archive.is/cuLFi
greazy
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Its really telling the example of personal AI/AGI given was booking tickets to a show.
greazy
·2 mesi fa·discuss
As someone who dreams up many types of businesses (yet rarely go through with any), thanks got sharing your blog.

Reading it now, great read!
greazy
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Besides your point but I learned about Mondragon on hacker news!

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41438060
greazy
·2 mesi fa·discuss
How can you tell?
greazy
·2 mesi fa·discuss
LibreOffice did a great job of transitioning to an alternative UX and went further to implement not just ribbons but different combinations classic menu with ribbons.

That's the answer IMO, yeah now there's two UX to maintain but it's a step forward.
greazy
·2 mesi fa·discuss
The solution would seem obvious: the lecturer should fork the repo, students submit PR to the fork and if they are deemed worthy they're pushed further upstream.
greazy
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Why are you comparing a machine to humans. They both clearly operate differently on a fundamental level.

Would therapy work on an LLM?