

He died doing what he loved and he got other people to pay for it. 64 isn’t old, but it’s more than some people get without doing stupid shit.
He died doing what he loved and he got other people to pay for it. 64 isn’t old, but it’s more than some people get without doing stupid shit.
LLMs can reason about information. It’s fine to call them intelligent systems.
It’s reasonable to refer to unsupervised learning as “learning on its own”.
I bought a Philips device and installed the companion app (Kitchen+). It has a decent selection of recipes that you can filter by appliance and other stuff. You can add your own recipes too.
I love my airfryer and may upgrade it to a larger one. I’ve started making my own food again instead of eating fast food every day (depression sucks).
You can block a service from establishing outbound connections while allowing it to respond to inbound connections. It’s pretty common to do this because server software generally has no business calling out unprompted.
You don’t want the service to create arbitrary outbound connections, but you want your device to be able to communicate with the service.
It’s been a while since I’ve done network stuff, but it sounds like a pretty simple textbook problem.
A self-hosted service requires local network, not internet
You don’t have to audit code to ensure it doesn’t call home.
Ridiculous take.
There’s a vast difference between using a cloud service that definitely spies on you, and a self-hosted solution that you can ensure doesn’t.
An LLM trained exclusively on Facebook would be hilarious. It’d be like the Monty Python argument skit.
Small Basic is about equivalent to Scratch in terms of what you can do, but you have to actually write the code. It reinforces various coding principles in a more explicit way than Scratch.
The website has a printable curriculum that looks reasonable.
I think it’s an excellent stepping stone.
My hypothesis is that wealth causes brain damage.
Aren’t we talking about a scenario where anyone left behind will die? That’s billions of people every time we hop planets. Am I missing something?
I think you severely underestimate the difficulty in establishing a biosphere. Could we grow crops? Yeah, sure, I guess. Hydroponics, if nothing else. It’d be a nearly completely barren world with just a few crop fields. How inspiring.
It’s an obvious overreach.
An AI generated image is essentially the solution to a math problem. Say the images are/become illegal. Is it then also illegal to possess the input to that equation? The input can be used to perfectly replicate the illegal image after all. What if I change a word in the prompt such that the subject of the generated image becomes clothed? Is that then suddenly legal?
I understand the concern, but it’s just incredibly messy to legislate what amounts to thought crimes.
Maybe we could do something to discourage distribution, but the law would have to be very carefully worded to prevent abuse.
Not so. There are plenty of use cases that already have better solutions.
Habitability is about more than just gravity, atmosphere, etc.
Earth has a biosphere compatible with human life. If all technology disappeared overnight, humanity would survive.
There’s also the issue of moving billions of people.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernormal_stimulus