HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

lebek

no profile record

Submissions

Reeks, Wrecks and Robots

washingtonpost.com
2 points·by lebek·29 dni temu·0 comments

Open-source AI modding tool for Rimworld (and soon Factorio)

1 points·by lebek·2 miesiące temu·0 comments

The day you get cut out of the economy

geohot.github.io
3 points·by lebek·3 miesiące temu·1 comments

Thoughts on Slowing the Fuck Down

mariozechner.at
3 points·by lebek·3 miesiące temu·1 comments

Did it get dumber? Tracking Claude Code and Codex according to HN comments

diditgetdumber.com
3 points·by lebek·3 miesiące temu·2 comments

The most important question nobody's asking about AI

youtube.com
1 points·by lebek·4 miesiące temu·0 comments

Moltbook is a bad takeoff scenario where human psychology itself is the exploit

twitter.com
42 points·by lebek·6 miesięcy temu·15 comments

Please, Don't Automate Science

togelius.blogspot.com
1 points·by lebek·7 miesięcy temu·0 comments

The False Promise of Imitating Proprietary LLMs

arxiv.org
126 points·by lebek·3 lata temu·83 comments

LIMA: Less Is More for Alignment

arxiv.org
27 points·by lebek·3 lata temu·9 comments

comments

lebek
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
Done: https://agentiqtracker.com/#install
lebek
·4 miesiące temu·discuss
> Then human work is changed to figuring out new things and the AI solves all old things, that seems much more fun than most white collar work today.

But it's not fun to be figuring out new things all the time. Some amount of routine work is necessary to 1) exercise mastery (feels good), and 2) recover energy. This is why a lot of people find agentic coding exhausting and less fun, you're basically always having to be creative (what's the next feature?) or solve the hardest 5% of issues the LLM can't handle.
lebek
·2 lata temu·discuss
I understand that, but it seems like even the MVP "shitty" flagellum would require many mutations that individually have no benefit. But I suppose with enough generations/parallelism you get enough stacking of useless mutations to reach the useful ones.
lebek
·2 lata temu·discuss
I think he's saying, random mutation wouldn't produce all required components at once. One mutation gives you a bit of a flagella, another gives you bit of a nose, but how does the flagella mutation survive to coexist with the nose mutation that makes it useful.

I suspect the answer is that having flagella without a nose is still better than having no flagella. If so it suggests evolution isn't good at accessing groups of mutations that aren't individually beneficial.
lebek
·3 lata temu·discuss
Link to said research?
lebek
·3 lata temu·discuss
> nobody at this point expects a 13B parameter model to succeed with the same accuracy at the broad range of tasks supported by what may be a 1T parameter model

I think a lot of people believe exactly that. To take one example from the "We Have No Moat" essay:

"It doesn’t take long before the cumulative effect of all of these fine-tunings overcomes starting off at a size disadvantage. Indeed, in terms of engineer-hours, the pace of improvement from these models vastly outstrips what we can do with our largest variants, and the best are already largely indistinguishable from ChatGPT." - https://www.semianalysis.com/p/google-we-have-no-moat-and-ne...