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mode80

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Kaggle Grandmasters Playbook: 7 Tested Modeling Techniques for Tabular Data

developer.nvidia.com
3 points·by mode80·10 ay önce·0 comments

Quadratic Equation Rap by Suno.ai

suno.com
4 points·by mode80·2 yıl önce·2 comments

comments

mode80
·geçen yıl·discuss
This happens once it starts improving itself.
mode80
·2 yıl önce·discuss
I remember inspecting the thermostat in my parent’s house as a child. It was a coil of something metalic which I assume expands and contracts with temperature and physically pushes electrical contacts together to turn on the heat when needed. Knowing how it works, it’s hard for me to imagine that this feels like anything. The whole contraption is just an arrangement of molecules doing what molecules do. But then again, so am I.
mode80
·2 yıl önce·discuss
mere trillian dollar industries. so far.
mode80
·2 yıl önce·discuss
Congrats Dad and son. I was going to say something about the blue text on red being hard to read. But you know what? Keep it. Live the vibe.
mode80
·2 yıl önce·discuss
ScienceClic did an excellent video about the accuracy with a better recreation: https://youtu.be/ABFGKdKKKyg
mode80
·2 yıl önce·discuss
I did this and wrote about my experience:

https://mode80.github.io/7-langs-in-12-months.html

I don't regret it. But if ML is your main goal, Python is where you will end up because it's where the libraries are.
mode80
·2 yıl önce·discuss
This is great. Suggest one additional bit to show black at the bottom. That way the player of black is not handicapped by playing from an upside down position.

Or just rip off the chess piece design of this other minimalist chess board simulator, which is never upside down:

https://mirrorchess.com/

(It's ok, I made it.)
mode80
·2 yıl önce·discuss
Thanks for making this!

Note: I was carefully reading along and well into the third notebook before I realized that the code sections marked "TODO" were actual exercises for the reader to implement! (And the tests which follow are for the reader to check their work.)

This is a clever approach. It just wasn't obvious to me from the outset.

(I thought the TODOs were just some fiddly details you didn't want distracting readers from the big picture. But in fact, those are the important parts.)
mode80
·2 yıl önce·discuss
Made this for my daughter in Algebra I. Enjoy
mode80
·3 yıl önce·discuss
Karpathy ends on a note of despair "Maybe I should just do a startup. I have a really cool idea for a mobile local social iPhone app." That's exactly the path his now-boss took to bring us this. :)
mode80
·3 yıl önce·discuss
I love Karpathy et al but this is what finally made it click for me: https://youtu.be/kWLed8o5M2Y?si=SJT5_lCJ0hSR7Z_k
mode80
·3 yıl önce·discuss
I'll expand for those asking. The first third of the presentation does such an excellent job of steel-manning the case for concern, that I couldn't wait to hear his arguments against it. When he gets around to that, he reaches for a made-up concept he calls the "outside view" where he argues you should ignore rational arguments (aka the "inside view") if the person making those rational arguments seems weird.* Slides follow showing VCs in bad PR photos. What more evidence does anyone need?

*"But the outside view tells you something different. ... Even though their arguments are irrefutable, everything in your experience tells you you're dealing with a cult. Of course, they have a brilliant argument for why you should ignore those instincts, but that's the inside view talking."
mode80
·3 yıl önce·discuss
Let me save you 20 minutes of your life: This guy's lead argument is that the smart people who advise caution in creating super-intelligence look weird. He's quite proud of this argument.