- It's definitely a cult for elected officials who join (according to your discriminating criterion)
- Why did the original post for which these are the discussions disappear from HN? I cannot even find it with a word search and it should not have been displaced from the top 30 yet.
- I suspect this was an easy way to test it without having to build a rotatable optical bench.
A practical device may be an array of light sources and telescopes on a rotating mount or a set of moveable mirrors that achieve the same effect.
- This is truly terrible.
What happened to a new JS front end library every week?
If this keeps up, we won't get to completely throw away all of our old code and retool every two years (the way we've been operating for the last 20 years)
How will we ever spend 85% of our time spinning up on new js front end libraries?
And don't even get me started on the back end.
If AI had been around in 2010, we probably still have some people writing apps in Rails.
OMG what a disaster that would be.
It's a good thing we just completely threw away all of the work that went into all of those gems. If people had continued using them, we wouldn't have had the chance to completely rewrite all of them in node and python from scratch.
- I guess this signals the end of focusing on testing to prove one's "rank" as a student and actually start focusing on educating students rather than evaluating them.
The whole problem with factory mass-education is the almost exclusive focus on evaluation. A little bit of education happens as a side-effect of the unrelenting soul-crushing evaluation so we've put up with it and called it education for 100 years.
ChatGPT will make it nearly impossible to cause any educating to happen as a side effect of constant re-evaluation.
That means we are going to have to focus on education directly. Probably just train ChatGPT to be a really good tutor and everybody gets a 19th century rich boy's education instead of the junk we've had in feed-lot-style schools for the last 100 years.
Note that Waldorf schools are kind of immune to this problem since the kids don't get to touch a computer until they are in 9th grade and heck, they don't even read until 2nd grade.
- Waldorf schools work. There is no testing, there are no grades until high School.
Lots of the silicon valley elite send their kids to Waldorf schools.
Are they all completely unaware of the effectiveness of deliberate practice?
I rather doubt it.
I think they are aware that motivation is what really matters.
My three kids all went to Waldorf School and never had grades until they entered high school at a public school.
None of them ever made anything less than an a+ in any class in a public school.
This was transitioning cold straight out of Waldorf with no testing to a public school.
They all got into very good colleges and are performing extraordinarily well at college. (My oldest daughter graduated from Stanford with a CS degree and straight A's)
Motivation, motivation, motivation.
- This document is conduct unbecoming of a congressional committee.
- Can you guys add huggingface transformers as one of the public demo repos? I have some very specific use cases where I've seen ChatGPT with GPT4 totally fall on its face Dunning-Kruger style.
I'd like to see if your tech solves those issues.
- So specifically, you are saying that LLM coding assistant currently gets confused when working on a large source file but if it had room for more context, you could get better help in writing code because it would have understanding of the entire module. Correct?
- No specific practical problems though? Looks to me a lot like "it's amazing. we want more amazing" rather than "if we had it, we could solve this specific practical problem people have been wanting to solve for a long time without considering a LLM as a possible solution"
- 3 points
- This is just one case the general rule of ambiguity.
At one of my jobs, a product manager came up with the idea of categorizing explicitly delineating everybody's selection criteria into a "normalized" form to allow for aggregating statistics.
I tried to point out up front what a fool's errand in this was. There is way too much ambiguity in the language.
I was overruled and the company then spent probably 7 to 15 million dollars chasing this ridiculous El Dorado dream. Eventually, after 3 years of wandering in the wilderness of normalized ontologies, they gave up and decided all NLP is bad.
This decision came out about 2 months before the release of chatGPT.
- I agree that humans are a blight on the planet. We need fewer of them and more resources for the benevolent AI overlords, I mean buddies.
Fortunately, naturally declining populations due to the apparent sudden realization of humanity that resources are limited may save the planet yet.
- To all the folks who are so concerned about bad actors trying to develop organisms that will harm people:
Have you forgotten that the world is full of bad actors who are literally trying to eat people? There are not merely thousands of them but hundreds of trillions of them.
They spend all day long everyday trying to find a random path to something that can eat you.
It is the height of hubris to imagine that humans could outcompete that.
- At first when I started reading this it seemed rather compelling but the further I went along the more I could see they were making use of innuendo and psychological manipulation techniques.
If their thesis is supportable, they don't need to do that.
I'll pay attention when somebody writes a dispassionate article without all the propaganda.
- Assholes who actually can learn to hide the fact that they are assholes are probably a lot less annoying.
- The vast majority of people are unwilling/unable to think deeply enough about the system to understand it. Thus, the simplified rule of thumb that generating electricity reduces your power bill is needed for them to even understand the general direction of what needs to be done. Perhaps the power utility could include an explainer page at the back of the monthly statement for those with the interest and capacity to understand it. Maybe 2% of people will read and understand it. The other 98% can just be smug about their lowered power bill and blissfully unaware of their part in accelerating the market shift to solar.
- This is approximately half the plot of Terry Gilliam's movie "Brazil"
This is one of the smallest scale cases I’ve heard of, but not nearly as weird or innovative as it sounds at first blush.
People have long been making analogous use of stomachs, intestines, even skulls if you go back far enough.