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rbancroft

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rbancroft
·2 個月前·discuss
Cppreference.com is my favorite resource for up to date info.
rbancroft
·3 個月前·discuss
When I attended back in the late 90’s, there was a view that once y2k was over and that crisis was dealt with the industry would collapse and there wouldn’t be any jobs.

What’s happening now reminds me a lot of that.
rbancroft
·6 個月前·discuss
Where is the sense of dread coming from?
rbancroft
·7 個月前·discuss
Listening to Dario at the NYT DealBook summit, and reading between the lines a bit, it seems like he is basically saying Anthropic is trying to be a reponsible, sustainable business and charging customers accordingly, and insinuating that OpenAI is being much more reckless, financially.
rbancroft
·7 個月前·discuss
Convenience and cost seem like big advantages.
rbancroft
·7 個月前·discuss
If it works, he gets credit. If it fails or never happens, someone else gets the blame. pretty classic.
rbancroft
·8 個月前·discuss
Very impressive, nice work!
rbancroft
·11 年前·discuss
I agree they most likely were Islamist, although incidentally saying Allahu Akbar is not a very precise way of identifying an Islamist: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takbir

To quote from the page: 'In videos released during the course of the Syrian Civil War, Free Syrian Army, Al-Nusra Front, other rebel and Islamist groups and ISIL are heard shouting "Takbir" and "Allahu Akbar"'

Some of those are Islamist groups, some are not.

Also, we don't know if the perpetrators were French or not, so what 42% of young French Muslims believe is not relevant at this point. Even if it was relevant, it would be hard to draw any conclusions from it. In the same link you provide, it seems that over 75% of French Muslims are concerned about the rise of Islamic Extremism.