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_0ffh

2,918 karmajoined 16 năm trước

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_0ffh
·5 ngày trước·discuss
This is... strange? I wonder what the reason might be?

Anyways, you've found someone. Or at least someone who used to.
_0ffh
·6 ngày trước·discuss
Well, iff is a useful abbreviation. I use it in personal notes at least, and would use it more often if I thought it was more widely understood.
_0ffh
·13 ngày trước·discuss
Oh, I assume they're innovating - it's what I meant with "doing new things".

But the word pioneer comes from French pionnier, literally “foot soldier”, a soldier who goes ahead to prepare the way.

If you don't publish you may be advancing, but you're not preparing anyone's way.
_0ffh
·14 ngày trước·discuss
I don't need to. Those who get it get it. Apparently that doesn't include you, and I'm fine with that.
_0ffh
·14 ngày trước·discuss
I'm not.
_0ffh
·14 ngày trước·discuss
I'm afraid I'm even balking at the word "pioneering" in context with US frontier labs. They are probably doing a few new things, right, but they are not blazing any trails for others to follow along, the Chinese are.
_0ffh
·14 ngày trước·discuss
Lookahead Sparse Attention should be playing a big role as well, as it dramatically slashes memory consumption.
_0ffh
·15 ngày trước·discuss
They can only pay so much because of the expectations about the generated value. Those might turn out wrong, as any expectation, but value is very much in the picture.
_0ffh
·17 ngày trước·discuss
You can try "language model", that's what I use when talking (when writing I use LLM when I expect the abbreviation to be understood).

I find just juxtaposing these two normal words flows much more nicely from the tongue than the comparatively awkward "LLM".
_0ffh
·17 ngày trước·discuss
Not the same person here, but a data point nonetheless. Before supplementing D3 I had a cold basically every year, sometimes twice a year. Since I brushed up my levels I average 1 cold in 6 years.
_0ffh
·17 ngày trước·discuss
To me it appears as if the study using the constructed dataset was a completely different one than the one that was concerned with AI.

For the AI study real data from "3.4 million people who submit 4 million job applications to 1,700 job postings across 150 employers and 11 industry sectors" was used.
_0ffh
·26 ngày trước·discuss
I wonder how personality forming it is, being a curious kid growing up hacking on computers. If you don't get what you expected, it's almost never the computer's fault - it means you did it wrong, and need to reconsider. There's no excuses and no dumping responsibility on anyone or anything else.

I have the feeling it probably teaches you something, or at least it should. Something not too unlike epistemic humility, maybe.
_0ffh
·30 ngày trước·discuss
It would still degrade it's effectiveness, which is what they claim to want. Exaggeratedly: If it wasn't so, you'd just need fundamental math in the training data, as everything else can be derived.
_0ffh
·tháng trước·discuss
The question is: If biological, computer security, and ML research are so bad, why do they even train on the relevant data?

The only answer that makes sense is they wanted the model to be competent and usable in these fields, just not by you, which is why they had to bolt on a badly functioning crippling device after the fact.
_0ffh
·tháng trước·discuss
No, it's not about reverse engineering. It targets ML research.
_0ffh
·tháng trước·discuss
No at least we know why they spent all that money on "safety research".
_0ffh
·tháng trước·discuss
I blame it on the art world being full of pseudo-intellectual little shits, so of course they get off on the Marxian esthetic of throwing around signalling phrases like "late capitalism". They live and die by pretense, there just isn't anything more than that to these "people". All facade, nothing inside. The average LLM has more soul than these types, I fear.
_0ffh
·tháng trước·discuss
There is actually a way to get really amazing sample efficiency out of a learning setup, and that's engineering in a load of appropriate inductive biases, which personally I am convinced evolution has done for us. Explains a big chunk of the "how are brains so sample efficient" problem really easy, but unfortunately without handing us an easy way to replicate it, which makes it unpopular. Also, it's something that we don't really want to do in the same way evolution has, as all those biases do even further reduce sample efficiency for all the things for which they are not appropriate.
_0ffh
·tháng trước·discuss
Thoughtful comment, and I'd like to add another angle: However meaningful it is to say the community is divided, I also think that individuals are "divided" on the question as well.

I can speak from myself as an example (although n=1): I am incredibly open to machine learning and the advances it brings. On the other hand I am extremely conscious of the fact that the current LLMs do often write bad code, which becomes especially obvious once projects go much beyond "private toy" size. For me personally the consequence is that I try to make my projects even more modular, and the modules even more clearly delineated. With proper guidance, current LLMs work mostly fine when working on isolated modules. That doesn't mean they don't sometimes fail even there, but they also on rare occasions come up with surprisingly clever solutions when you let them loose on a code base, as long as the problem you want them to fix is mostly isolated in a couple of modules.

So long story short, you can be all for LLMs and still be conscious of their shortcomings, and that just vibe coding applications you intend to let loose on unsuspecting customers is probably a bad idea, and possibly outright immoral. We have already seen more than enough examples of vibe coded applications dumping sensitive user data into the lap of anyone who is inclined to pick up a stick and prod them a little bit.
_0ffh
·tháng trước·discuss
Good news! On the current trajectory, I am very hopeful nonlinear RNNs could make a comeback. Which would incidentally help to ease the memory pressure for inference tasks.