Honestly big noobquestion: isn't math just very very nested patternmatching based on a few foundational operators?
ive always felt, that im bad at math, cause i forget all the rules, but seeing solutions (and knowing the used pattern) always made "sense".
I always thought the hard math problems are so deeply nested or you have to remember trick xyz that people just didnt think about it yet..
I think this is a very subjective matter and depends on how negatively connoted someone's perception of the word 'manipulate' is. By your definition, I would consider 'studying/learning' also a form of manipulation.
For me its more his attitude that puts me off.
He might be intelligent, but his EQ doesnt seem that high.
The condescending way he references the "malcolm in the middle"-episode "hot dumb girl" couldve been just the explaination of the "1 dollar = 1 million dollar".
Its baffling to me how the US cannot handle their traffic laws.
How is there any doubt in running a red light? Why can they not let common sense handle it?
Just fine the car owner without question.
Car owners will think twice borrowing their cars.
Easy detection, less bureaucracy. And hopefully safer streets.
What google search alternative have you found?
Im trying out ecosia, duckduckgo and brave search, but i find their search results even worse, so in the second query i tend to bang to google..
Honestly imo the driving license requirements and the respective fines for violations is too low. Rigid rules generally improve the traffic flow. But as soon as someone just doesnt care, the system breaks down.
Why forget about boxes and deterministic control and start thinking of error tolerance and recovery?
I know, that LLMs are statistical models, but can you not use patterns to enforce a deterministic outcome? (Single responsibility for each agent, retrying llm calls, rephrasing prompts, etc?)
Hopefully it can fill the void in Linux and Windows Systems.
And please without subscription. If it works fine id love to pay 50$+ like the Alfred Powerpack
I always thought the hard math problems are so deeply nested or you have to remember trick xyz that people just didnt think about it yet..