Bewaretheicespiders
Bewaretheicespiders t1_jeg7daw wrote
Reply to comment by TuckerCarlsonsOhface in Here’s what went wrong with Virgin Orbit by cnbc_official
Oh there is demand. Demand for launch services still outpaces supply. Its exploding.
https://spacenews.com/launch-demand-remains-high-despite-industry-struggles/
Virgin Orbit was just bad.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_jeg2m6g wrote
Reply to Petition for keeping up the progress tempo on AI research while securing its transparency and safety. | LAION by acutelychronicpanic
Imagine if we tried to halt the development of the tractor because of potential impacts on farm work.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_je9tx5w wrote
Reply to comment by ArcticHelix in G forces and turning in space by ArcticHelix
Gemini 8 spun fast enough for the astronauts to experience earth-like gravity. The first, only and totally experimental human-scale artificial gravity experiment.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_je8adww wrote
Reply to ChatGPT-4's Response to NYT Article: Addressing AI Challenges and Ensuring Ethical Development by Hot-Pea1271
> It's interesting how ChatGPT-4 agrees with most of the article.
ChatGPT does not agree or disagree with anything. It spews statistically probable words given a long context and he corpus its been optimized with.
Man I can't wait for adversarial attacks to make people understand that this is a text generator, not an AI oracle.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_je688hj wrote
Reply to comment by azuriasia in Are there AI theorists/philosophers who have already thought out sensible rules for how to best regulate AI development? by dryuhyr
The fact that you dont still work 120 hours a week in a field says otherwise.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_je67b7b wrote
Reply to comment by azuriasia in Are there AI theorists/philosophers who have already thought out sensible rules for how to best regulate AI development? by dryuhyr
There had never been anything like the tractor, the computer, the internet...
Bewaretheicespiders t1_je6648p wrote
Reply to comment by azuriasia in Are there AI theorists/philosophers who have already thought out sensible rules for how to best regulate AI development? by dryuhyr
Its your first time, innit? Ive heard that every decade since the 70s. A productive society is a society that can afford a lot of goods and services and thus improvements in productivity leads to higher employment, not less.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_je64hfr wrote
Reply to comment by azuriasia in Are there AI theorists/philosophers who have already thought out sensible rules for how to best regulate AI development? by dryuhyr
You drank way much kool aid, kid. You should take a break from social media.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_je63h00 wrote
Reply to comment by azuriasia in Are there AI theorists/philosophers who have already thought out sensible rules for how to best regulate AI development? by dryuhyr
Of all the ideas in the history of humanity, taxing improvement in productivity is the dumbest.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_je5tliy wrote
Reply to comment by Dacadey in Are there AI theorists/philosophers who have already thought out sensible rules for how to best regulate AI development? by dryuhyr
Exactly. You can try to regulate how its used, but its impossible to regulate how its developed. Whatever is expensive to do now will be trivial in a few years.
At any rate these calls are mostly out of either ignorance or a desire of control.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_je5lah4 wrote
>GI or Artificial General Intelligence is in its nascent stage with ChatGPT.
Its nooooooooot ChatGPT is as narrow as an imagenet classifier.
>Flying cars
Its called an helicopter
Bewaretheicespiders t1_jdxaf9h wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in TIL that there are official guidelines for muslims to perform their rituals from space since 2007, when the first malaysian astronaut join the space station. by TonahVilla
Thats called supersitions. When superstitions become a dogma then its a religion.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_jdxa9st wrote
Reply to TIL that there are official guidelines for muslims to perform their rituals from space since 2007, when the first malaysian astronaut join the space station. by TonahVilla
I really hate the idea that we'll export all of this religious nonsense out of the planet.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_jdoyplc wrote
Reply to comment by vitalyc in Goodbye Google. Welcome AI. by OmegaConstant
Its 4gig of weights. There is no comparison with GPT-4.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_jdokdmg wrote
Reply to comment by vitalyc in Goodbye Google. Welcome AI. by OmegaConstant
They arent running GPT4 locally, it sends the request through an API.
GPT3 has 175 billion parameters, at float16 thats 326 gigabyte just for the parameters. That would fill most phone's storage, not to mention the 12 gig of ram the most expensive phones have.
Then GPT4 is many times that...
Bewaretheicespiders t1_jdneo2a wrote
Reply to Goodbye Google. Welcome AI. by OmegaConstant
The cost of inference, in GPU and thus electric power, of these LLM is just too high. A 8.5 billion searches a day, replacing google search with GPT4 would consume an estimated 7 billion watt hours. A day. Just for the power consumed by the GPUs.
You would need over 638 hoover dams just to power that.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_jdnclzn wrote
Reply to comment by FeatheryBallOfFluff in A recently submitted paper has demonstrated that Stable Diffusion can accurately reconstruct images from fMRI scans, effectively allowing it to "read people's minds". by iboughtarock
Every sub, the more mainstream it gets, eventually turns into /r/antiwork
Bewaretheicespiders t1_jdmj3fv wrote
Reply to comment by BrangdonJ in Rocket Lab targets $50 million launch price for Neutron rocket to challenge SpaceX’s Falcon 9 by cnbc_official
Maybe. Blue hasnt made it to orbit in what, 23 years? ULA's only interested in government launches. Relativity is more interested in 3D printing than spaceflight, its a big question mark wether they'll be competitive if and when they get to orbit.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_jdjeias wrote
Reply to comment by New_Poet_338 in Rocket Lab targets $50 million launch price for Neutron rocket to challenge SpaceX’s Falcon 9 by cnbc_official
There is a market in being number 2. By being a telecom, SpaceX has become a competition of a lot of its clients. Which would like to launch with someone else if there was a decent option. Ive met with many clients in the software world that didnt want to have their stuff running on AWS because they compete with Amazon on the retail space.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_jdaee3x wrote
Both projets mentionned are just radioisotope power? Surely we can do better than that.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_jc55l8a wrote
Reply to comment by x0JohnSmith0x in Will AI Replace Programmers? by Charlotte_D_Katakuri
When that happens, mission accomplished I say.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_jc2yeqt wrote
Reply to Will AI Replace Programmers? by Charlotte_D_Katakuri
Again, no. Typing code is to programmers what hammering is to carpenters. Give me the best nailgun in the world, it still wont make be a carpenter. Having AI tools to assist in programming is welcome.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_jamwrro wrote
Reply to comment by OSUfan88 in After flying four astronauts into orbit, SpaceX makes its 101st straight landing — ‘I just feel so lucky that I get to fly on this amazing machine.’ by marketrent
Atlas V would have a pretty tight confidence interval on that 100% reliability yeah.
With that number of flight there is only a 0.6% probability that Atlas' V "actual" reliability (partial or total success, were it to fly an infinite number of time) is less than 95%
So if I remember my Stats correctly, and its been over 20 years so bear with me, we can say with 99% confidence than Atlas V's is at least 95% reliable?
Bewaretheicespiders t1_jahz73z wrote
Reply to comment by ElReptil in Satellite Constellations Are an Existential Threat for Astronomy by ChieftainMcLeland
Ah, people with no vision. Thanks to low gravity and free real estate, you could build on the moon a bigger and better telescope than anything possible on earth. All you need to low launch costs.
Bewaretheicespiders t1_jegad3u wrote
Reply to comment by TuckerCarlsonsOhface in Here’s what went wrong with Virgin Orbit by cnbc_official
LauncherOne was 500 kg per launch to LEO, for 12 million, with a 2/3 success rate. Just because there is strong demand doesnt mean you dont have to be competitive.