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ckrapu

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Minimax M3

minimax.co.uk
30 points·by ckrapu·w zeszłym miesiącu·12 comments

Poverty Bayes: fitting million-parameter models for pennies with serverless MCMC

christopherkrapu.com
1 points·by ckrapu·2 miesiące temu·0 comments

Don't know where your data is from? Bayesian modeling for unknown coordinates

christopherkrapu.com
50 points·by ckrapu·2 miesiące temu·4 comments

Quake in the browser using JavaScript and Three.js

mrdoob.github.io
5 points·by ckrapu·5 miesięcy temu·0 comments

Rolling your own serverless OCR in 40 lines of code

christopherkrapu.com
1 points·by ckrapu·6 miesięcy temu·0 comments

How I accidentally became a power AI user in big tech

christopherkrapu.com
2 points·by ckrapu·6 miesięcy temu·0 comments

Show HN: Honor Quote – a new way to spot AI cheating on schoolwork

honorquote.com
3 points·by ckrapu·7 miesięcy temu·1 comments

Using Antigravity for Statistical Physics in JavaScript

christopherkrapu.com
45 points·by ckrapu·8 miesięcy temu·29 comments

Ideas on how to improve my teaching repo?

github.com
1 points·by ckrapu·10 miesięcy temu·1 comments

comments

ckrapu
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
Isn't this way more expensive?

https://aws.amazon.com/ec2/capacityblocks/pricing/
ckrapu
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
I think you dramatically underestimate the number of motivated, trained people who find the current societal conditions on Earth untenable.

By the way, this is not just a cheap shot at the Trump administration. The issues are much wider than that.
ckrapu
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
As you pointed out, the viable area with a sufficiently cold winter is probably shrinking every year. Perhaps the better solution is the one proposed by Yablonovitch et al in which they suggest using deserts instead, though I think that is about as risky, and also a tremendous risk for fire.

Deep down, I have the gut feeling that in a century's time, people will think we were clinically insane for not trying to stockpile as much carbon as possible in whatever means we have, since it is clearly the foundation for biology, and widespread synthetic biology will use it (and N, and P) by the gigatonne. I really don't see any fundamental physical reason why we won't be growing entire cities made out of wood with the right genetic engineering and sufficient feedstock.
ckrapu
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
Thanks for taking a look at that article! In short, you're right on the first item; only a fraction of that total arable land actually experiences subfreezing winter temperatures.

Given your word choice, I suspect you hail from Britain or a commonwealth country and your (appropriate) definition of township differs from mine. I should have defined it as "survey township" which is a USA term for a grouping of land parcels six miles tall by six miles wide. Again, the number presented is a ballpark estimate, as though we may not have as many nice villages and hedgerows in the Dakotas and other Plains states, we similarly do not farm every single literal acre--though many act as if we should, animals and people be damned.
ckrapu
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
It'd be nice if you just wrote the article yourself instead of using ChatGPT. I know it's a lot of work, but I would be much more inclined to finish it.
ckrapu
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
I think that there's a major difference in the resulting mindsets that the two types of experiences form, though.

The first learn that nature is always present and doing its best to kill you / wreck your harvest, and that it is only through man's intelligence and social bonds that we thrive. I would argue a corollary of this is that one cannot tolerate malicious or grossly neglectful people around.

The second group learns that other people are a liability and that bad actors are just a fact of life to be tolerated and worked around.

Both approaches are clearly optimal for their respective environment. The former seems like a stronger foundation for building a civilization on, though.
ckrapu
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
I can tell you wrote the article with ChatGPT. I’m out as soon as I pick up the smell. I don’t dislike the usage of AI, I just don’t trust. It if you haven’t written it yourself.
ckrapu
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
I expect it will be popular to dogpile on this article and point out how it's wrong in all sort of ways. I don't mean to do this and appreciate the writing, but a core difference is that software engineering always strives to avoid catering to the idiosyncrasies of the time and place while civil engineering is virtually all about the quirks of the site.

I think this results in quite different cultures.
ckrapu
·4 miesiące temu·discuss
My point is not that oil fails to generate revenue. Clearly it is a lucrative business. Instead, my claim is that the state economy was remarkably robust, productive, healthy, and well-optimized for middle class quality of life pre-2007.

Does it sound surprising to you that it was perfectly normal to rent a perfect acceptable two bedroom apartment in a safe town on the interstate for $300 a month and still easily find dignified, decent paying jobs without 1000 applications?

I've lived in many cities and work in tech now, and I can confidently say that, as it concerns the professions and jobs that unambiguously sustain and improve life, no community on the planet was more productive than my home state. There is more to the story than some shale.
ckrapu
·4 miesiące temu·discuss
With all due respect, I disagree.

I loved the winters. I loved the people. I loved how its natural beauty was subtle and rewarded the patient, unlike El Capitan or the Black Hills. The economy was fine before oil appeared.
ckrapu
·5 miesięcy temu·discuss
I don't like this article. In particular, this section is especially poor:

> Block 1: We couldn't calculate fast enough. Solution: The GPU.

> Block 2: We couldn't train deep enough. Solution: Transformer architecture.

> Block 3: We can't "think" fast enough. Solution: Groq’s LPU.

#2 is outright wrong. Deep networks were made viable from residual layers and their refinement. #3 is also incorrect; "think" = compute so this is the same statement as #1.

Also, the "limestone" analogy is pretty weak.
ckrapu
·5 miesięcy temu·discuss
I originally tried to do this on my own server but my GPU is too old :(
ckrapu
·5 miesięcy temu·discuss
I wanted to let an LLM be able to grep and read through it.
ckrapu
·5 miesięcy temu·discuss
I wasn't aware of dots when I wrote the blog post. This is really good to know!! I would like to try again with some newer models.
ckrapu
·5 miesięcy temu·discuss
A thought I often have - older millennials and younger Gen X have a unique obligation to fix certain parts of society because we are the youngest generation old enough to remember how to operate in and enjoy a world that wasn't A/B tested into a gray, lifeless background hum.
ckrapu
·6 miesięcy temu·discuss
From this perspective, humans are just ECC with an optimally non-zero bit flip rate for evolution.
ckrapu
·7 miesięcy temu·discuss
I think Theano takes the crown as first modern end-user library for autodiff and tensor operations.
ckrapu
·7 miesięcy temu·discuss
Mobile experience is not great
ckrapu
·9 miesięcy temu·discuss
I agree with some of the author’s criticisms, but diversity citations are a minor concern compared to the idea of paid access to publicly funded research.
ckrapu
·10 miesięcy temu·discuss
I want to help teach basic application design for GenAI. I've got a basic repo setup, but it's largely based on my own developer experience.

Any feedback is super appreciated.

I'm aiming it at new college grads who haven't had to maintain several services at once in production.