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somewhereoutth

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somewhereoutth
·12 วันที่ผ่านมา·discuss
The EU is predicated on the pooled sovereignty of its constituent countries, as exercised thought the EU Council. Apart from a limited number of certain matters, any EU country can veto any decision made by the EU Commission, or indeed the EU Parliament.
somewhereoutth
·16 วันที่ผ่านมา·discuss
I went to look for a new phone about 6 months ago - everything was AI this, AI that, all the display stands made a big deal about AI (to the extent I considered a 2024 phone because no AI). In the end I didn't buy at that point.

Just last week finally I had to buy a new phone, and so I went shopping again - this time no AI was mentioned anywhere. Not online, not on the stands in the shops, nowhere. The silence speaks volumes, as they say.
somewhereoutth
·21 วันที่ผ่านมา·discuss
*to billionaires

but snark aside, society needs to have a big conversation (meaning political) about what is good and what is bad about what should really be understood as the 'connectivity revolution' of the last 10-20 years.
somewhereoutth
·26 วันที่ผ่านมา·discuss
was this before or after Lisp's epiphany for lexical binding?
somewhereoutth
·28 วันที่ผ่านมา·discuss
Following S.I. notation, we might have Tk for token, so kTk, MTk, GTk etc.
somewhereoutth
·เดือนที่แล้ว·discuss
> Money doesn't appear out of thin air.

In fact [fiat] money does appear out of thin air (well, created by banks when they originate loans) - and has to to support a growing economy. Unfortunately, for various reasons, rather too much has been appearing, and has been funneled to the already wealthy.
somewhereoutth
·เดือนที่แล้ว·discuss
So apparently grid forming or synthetic inertia can be provided electronically nowadays, but presumably it would not be too terrible to put a rotating mass in between the (e.g.) solar power source and the rest of the grid? So the electricity from the solar panels runs a motor that turns a generator. I suppose power is lost through friction and other inefficiencies, and you'd need to co-locate the solar panels into a big enough farm.
somewhereoutth
·เดือนที่แล้ว·discuss
1. Both costs (going down) and performance (going up) likely are, or will shortly, approach asymptotic limits.

2. CFOs are seeing the token spend on the bottom line, and are not happy. CFOs don't care about 'the next big thing', they just count beans, and they are coming up short. CFOs tend to be the grown-ups in the C-suite, they will shut things down if they need to.

3. See 1. and 2.
somewhereoutth
·เดือนที่แล้ว·discuss
Yes. As makers we tend to assume that the more that is made the better, and that simply by having lots of (shiny!) stuff we will get paid/honored/favored etc, whereas in fact often this stuff becomes someone's problem somewhere.
somewhereoutth
·เดือนที่แล้ว·discuss
Banning online advertising would solve very nearly everything. Specifically, social media would die (and traditional media would get a new lease of life).

An intermediate step would be to ban personally targeted advertising, at least then the playing field can be leveled somewhat.
somewhereoutth
·เดือนที่แล้ว·discuss
Push up asset prices mainly - so locking poorer people out of (e.g.) home ownership.

Money is not a tangible thing, you can't eat or drink it. Instead it is a signalling protocol for resource allocation. If the very wealthy have many empty homes, when many people are homeless or inadequately housed, then that signalling protocol has failed (from a social justice point of view), and 'trickle down' is not working.
somewhereoutth
·เดือนที่แล้ว·discuss
lack of new content from the internet will make them go out of date. Not just facts and figures, but (for example) new programming languages/techniques.
somewhereoutth
·เดือนที่แล้ว·discuss
Yes the huge discrete stepwise training spend is critical.

Maybe investors will realise that "the only winning move is not to play".

And so we are left with (as was) frontier models getting more and more out of date as whoever their post bankruptcy custodians are tries to eek pennies on the dollar for inference on their decaying property. Perhaps along with local and/or highly specialized models still feeding on the after-glow of the huge amount of training that was (and is no longer) done.

The next AI winter is going to be deep, savage, and long.
somewhereoutth
·2 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
(sorry, nit pick, but I don't your usage of 'abrogate' is quite correct here, you can't abrogate to something)
somewhereoutth
·2 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
The real test would be if an LLM makes an important conjecture.
somewhereoutth
·2 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
But it is not a real economy is it? Vast sums of money are being spent subsidizing token processing with little to no tangible business benefit for the end user.

For those of us lucky enough to have the choice, the best bet is to sit it out for a year or so until it all comes crashing down, then re-engage with what's left of the software industry.
somewhereoutth
·2 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
I'm also glad they have the option - and it does seem that many will take up that option. They themselves have judged that factory work is less bad than 'house' work, might be worth listening to them.
somewhereoutth
·2 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
Right! I am currently living in a (relatively poor) Western European country that has recently experienced a tourism boom, and although the money pouring in has been nice for at least some, it has wrecked the existing social fabric in many ways - starting with housing.

On the flip side, at least the beaches are kept clean. In the UK (where I'm from) there is a big problem with sewage outflows. Meanwhile here an entire beach got washed away by the winter storms - so they are putting it all back! Maybe 100 000 m3 of sand!
somewhereoutth
·2 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
Right, however over-tourism is a real problem.

Tourism provides low quality, transitory jobs, with income flowing more to wealth holders (property owners etc) than to wealth creators. It distorts property markets and sucks the oxygen out of other kinds of business. About time the Med weaned itself off of it.
somewhereoutth
·2 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
Prior to the advent of LLMs, I had this concept of the 'complexity horizon' - essentially a [hand built] software system will naturally tend to get more and more complex until no-one can understand it - until it meets the complexity horizon. And there it stays, being essentially unmaintainable.

With LLMs, you can race right for that horizon, go right through, and continue far beyond! But then of course you find yourself in a place without reason (the real hell), with all the horror and madness that that entails.