Probably to allow proper sideloading of apps, instead of the contrived bullshit they already tried to pull.
Probably to allow proper sideloading of apps, instead of the contrived bullshit they already tried to pull.
Okay back in the days of IRC, I met this script kiddie who said he’d hack me, just give him my IP address. So I sent him his IP address and he disappeared suddenly.
I mean, maybe that hour is a human swapping batteries and giving it a light cleaning?
Yes but it’s fucking expensive to invalidate a patent. Possibly in the millions of dollars. That’s how patent trolls succeed - it’s far cheaper to own a bad patent than to fight one.
Mormons really are a different breed of Republican, look how they strongly voted for an independent candidate in 2016 (at least in Utah). That said, the vast majority of those people drank the Trump koolaid and have now fallen in line. It’s sad really, they used to stand for something.
Charging maybe? A robot’s gotta eat too.
Ironically security theater can have a a placebo effect on crime rates as well. It turns out that the likelihood that someone commits a crime is strongly correlated to the chance they believe they will get caught, not the actual chance of getting caught. That’s why fake security cameras are so effective.
Only up to the point where humans notice it. It’ll make AI images easier to detect, but still pretty for humans. Probably a win-win.
Yeah, in practice feeding AI its own outputs is totally fine as long as it’s only the outputs that are approved by users.
He’ll be a lot more responsive when he wakes up and takes a bath.
Men’s vision is movement based, just like T-rex.
I see you just printed a bonchee.
Yeah, albedo of an object might be described as the true color of a thing, if you take away the shading, reflectivity, and metallicity.
Asking that question is the first step people need in order to finally come to that conclusion. We all just completed the process a loooooong time ago.
Sure, go for it. But good luck paying an army of copywriters to summarize every article you read.
That’s not what I’m implying. What I’m saying is that wasting time and effort on quality is pointless when the threshold for success is low.
For example, I could use aerospace quality parts (perfectly machined to micron-level tolerances) to build a toaster. However, while this would not increase the performance meaningfully, the cost would be orders of magnitude greater. Instead I can use shitty off-the-shelf parts because it doesn’t really make a difference.
Maybe in other words, engineering tolerances apply to LLMs too. They’re crude devices, but it’s totally fine if you have a crude problem.
It might be all I care about. Humans might always be better, but AI only has to be good enough at something to be valuable.
For example, summarizing an article might be incredibly low stakes (I’m feeling a bit curious today), or incredibly high stakes (I’m preparing a legal defense), depending on the context. An AI is sufficient for one use but not the other.
That’s where he keeps all the anger.
And that’s why I like the “disappointing, good, awesome” scale. You only have three options and people generally know where to sort things.
Snake looks good in a crop top sweater.