I'd take "running at home" to mean running on reasonably available consumer hardware, which your setup is not. You can obviously build custom, but who's actually going to do that? OP's point is valid
There's a great non-AI point in this article - Seattle has great engineers. In pursuing startups, Seattle engineers are relatively unambitious compared to the Bay Area. By that I mean there's less "shooting for unicorns" and a comparatively more reserved startup culture and environment.
I'm not sure why. I don't think it's access to capital, but I'd love to hear thoughts.
I'm hiring Research Engineers and Machine Learning Engineers to bring Meta AI to Reality Labs devices, including RayBan Meta Smart Glasses. Build rich multi-modal experiences fully unlocking both the power of mixed-reality devices and Facebook personalization.
Research Engineers will push the boundaries of how to train and deploy Meta AI LLMs. Publish your work, and be a leader in industry best practices.
Machine Learning Engineers will help bring emerging technologies onto the next generations of Reality Labs hardware devices. Build systems to ensure Meta AI performance in constrained environments.
I'd argue communication is always an approximation to an ideal, anyways. The original version is going to be incomplete. How adequately can English (or your language of choice) represent a complex event or concept?
"Understand that even with the best intentions you'll likely still get it wrong."
Objective truth is incredibly unwieldly. It's almost impossible to get right - just considering imperfections in communication alone.
Ever play the game of telephone? One person tells a fact to someone, who tells that fact to another person. Go 3 hops and you're almost certainly going to end with a different fact than you started with.
Each step of knowledge transfer incurs loss - and this applies to all forms of communication.
Empericially, CNNs generalize better on image recognition tasks than hand built features. This comment doesn't make much sense and is needlessly obtuse in the face of progress, tbh.