> Or are you referring to the claims from Meta, Google, and Adobe -- which failed to hold up under independent evaluation.
This.
> However, he demonstrated a clear lack of understanding regarding what makes the bits "independent" or how to resolve the independence problem.
Yes, I didn’t want to call it out explicitly, but this is exactly the kind of thing that would have made my undergraduate statistics professor lose patience.
I'm trying it right now for a side project of mine, compared to Opus it is effectively better at following instructions and somehow has better "depth" when reasoning on complex tasks.
However, if it will not be part of subscriptions, I will not use it anymore.
I don't know what I am doing right, or wrong, but I have access to claude and codex and I find myself giving the more serious work to codex recently. I tend to trust it more.
I might try again Fable when it's back, but this Sonnet 5 didn't work well for my current projects.
I could spot numerous bugs in code written recently and less recently, by me or colleagues.
I was not angry but grateful and I knew there was no way back!
> To do this, your device is shouting to the world a ton of your personal information in something called a probe packet. A probe packet contains the MAC address as well as the list of all the past Wi-fi networks that your device has tried to join before, which can reveal a lot about you!
In the 2010s, maybe. Nowadays MAC address randomisation is the norm and past WiFi networks are not broadcast anymore.
I have a different take on this: how many people using a rifle do you see at composite bow tournaments?
We might just move this kind of activities to sandboxes and implement more strict requirements for participation. It might make them niche or indeed disappear.
I have 24GB VRAM available and haven't yet found a decent model or combination.
Last one I tried is Qwen with continue, I guess I need to spend more time on this.
This.
> However, he demonstrated a clear lack of understanding regarding what makes the bits "independent" or how to resolve the independence problem.
Yes, I didn’t want to call it out explicitly, but this is exactly the kind of thing that would have made my undergraduate statistics professor lose patience.