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yagyu

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Submissions

AI Assistance Reduces Persistence and Hurts Independent Performance

arxiv.org
4 points·by yagyu·3 tháng trước·0 comments

AI chatbots unable to accurately summarise news, BBC finds

bbc.com
10 points·by yagyu·năm ngoái·0 comments

Representation of BBC News Content in AI Assistants [pdf]

bbc.co.uk
2 points·by yagyu·năm ngoái·0 comments

JunctionOS

github.com
1 points·by yagyu·2 năm trước·0 comments

Combat Lander

lander.gg
2 points·by yagyu·2 năm trước·1 comments

comments

yagyu
·năm ngoái·discuss
In the same vein, Asimov in 1956:

Baley shrugged. He would never teach himself to avoid asking useless questions. The robots knew. Period. It occurred to him that, to handle robots with true efficiency, one must needs be expert, a sort of roboticist. How well did the average Solarian do, he wondered?
yagyu
·năm ngoái·discuss
You come off as snarky, but I kind of agree. We tried this first.

It turns out digital collaborative calendars are pretty great for us in general, there is no chance in hell I could keep the analog one up to date, so it was definitely worth having a screen on the wall.
yagyu
·năm ngoái·discuss
To answer the q above, this is what we have, too.
yagyu
·năm ngoái·discuss
Second this.

I ended up building a nice charging station right near the entrance. It has storage for keys, wallet, and other things to grab when heading out. It has an abundance of wired and wireless chargers for all devices.

Then I got a dumb (but nice) alarm clock for the bedroom.

Then I noticed that a common reason to pick up the phone is to check the calendar. I ended up hanging a monitor on the wall, displaying the family month/agenda calendars. It’s read only, but it prevents a lot of device checking.

Cannot recommend enough restructuring physical reality to not have device on your person at home. It also helps the kids to put theirs away and learn good habits.
yagyu
·2 năm trước·discuss
I suppose the Murderbot Diaries is also on the theme https://marthawells.com/murderbot1.htm
yagyu
·2 năm trước·discuss
Relevant book rec: Dogs of War by Adrian Tchaikovsky. https://adriantchaikovsky.com/dogs-of-war-series.html
yagyu
·2 năm trước·discuss
I met Keats through Dan Simmons - Hyperion. It's one of those books that hasn't quite left my mind despite finishing it some time ago.
yagyu
·3 năm trước·discuss
Thank you!
yagyu
·3 năm trước·discuss
“Hard” meaning specifically how many lawyer/HR hours, how long are the timelines, and are there other significant risks?
yagyu
·3 năm trước·discuss
Are there good ways for US companies to host international grad students in their internship programs? How hard is it for them?

Specifically I had a conversation with a few administrators at universities in Sweden and this question came up on behalf of their students.

Thanks for regularly showing up here. I went EB2NIW some years ago and still get ptsd reading these threads. Hang in there everyone struggling with immigration.
yagyu
·3 năm trước·discuss
I’d be interested in your thoughts on the case where the f_i are optimizable: f_i(t) = K(t, z_i), i=1..m << N. Like the representer thm but much fewer terms than you have data points to fit. The points z are usually called inducing points and may be optimized by gradient descent.

There is literature on approximating exact GP inference with (something like) these objects when m << N (variational inference).

However, I’m not aware of anyone drawing a clear picture of the other direction, starting from the optimization picture and explaining it in terms of inference, similar to what TFA does.

In TFA the number of functions is large, so the system is underdetermined. In the variational inference the system is overdetermined and I wonder what inference, if any, gradient descent does..

Caveat: 1am and a few drinks deep so if I’m not making sense that’s ok
yagyu
·3 năm trước·discuss
This seems like a young talent that we’ll see more of. I like your to the point writing style and obvious passion for mathematical clarity. Keep it up and best wishes for your phd studies.