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tirpen

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tirpen
·mese scorso·discuss
Which LLM did you use? I assume that will make a pretty big difference.
tirpen
·2 mesi fa·discuss
This is propaganda, not data.

If the Chinese government published a graph that said the opposite, would you consider that a serious and objective source?
tirpen
·2 mesi fa·discuss
> China is not competing, it is distilling US models

China are cheating by using data obtained without permission to train their models in an evil commie way!

They should have done what the US did instead and trained models on data obtained without permission in a fair and freedum way!

> Where are the Chinese models that are blowing US ones out of the water?

Kimi2 blows every US model out of the water in any comparison that includes both costs and performance.
tirpen
·2 mesi fa·discuss
That's not nearly as big a problem in Germany as the US.

The median age of Bundestag members is 45.4

https://data.ipu.org/parliament/DE/DE-LC01/

In the US Senate It's 63.9.

https://data.ipu.org/parliament/US/US-UC01/
tirpen
·6 mesi fa·discuss
Yes. The constant full screen color flashing made Windows 8 not just unpleasant to use, I was unable to use it since I literally got migraines after using it for too long.

Click on a pdf? The whole screen turns bright red for a second before loading. Click on a Word file, same but blue. It was hell to use for people sensitive to flashing lights.

I got special permission at work to stick with Windows 7 longer than the rest of the company for medical reasons.
tirpen
·7 mesi fa·discuss
I think another ace up Django's sleeve is that it has had a remarkable stable API for a long time with very few breaking changes, so almost all blogposts about Django that the LLM has gobbled up will still be mostly correct whether they are a year or a decade old.

I get remarkably good and correct LLM output for Django projects compared to what I get in project with more fast moving and frequently API breaking frameworks.
tirpen
·3 anni fa·discuss
The knob still exists as a physical thing between in your fingers. You can feel it turn, you feel how much you've turned it, you feel the little clicks if it has those, you feel if you turn it into an extreme position.

That's what tactile feedback is. It doesn't matter if the knob is connected to a digital or analog circuit. It has tactile feedback either way.
tirpen
·7 anni fa·discuss
That sounds like a truly ridiculous patent! Optional chaining is just another syntax for the Maybe-monad, surely?

Which has been around since 1998 at least (When Haskell 1.3 added monads)
tirpen
·8 anni fa·discuss
Here is Android sending private conversations to random contacts: https://daringfireball.net/linked/2011/01/06/android-sms