ReasonablyBadass
ReasonablyBadass t1_j75oft5 wrote
Reply to comment by coumineol in Possible first look at GPT-4 by tk854
Ah X)
So basically the same as now? Just even easier?
ReasonablyBadass t1_j75l27h wrote
Reply to comment by coumineol in Possible first look at GPT-4 by tk854
How?
ReasonablyBadass t1_j75difw wrote
Reply to comment by Brashendeavours in Possible first look at GPT-4 by tk854
Forget ads. Political views are the real danger here.
ReasonablyBadass t1_j72jlx2 wrote
Reply to comment by Haplo_dk in Study: Superconductivity switches on and off in 'magic-angle' graphene by amancxz2
Also pressure
ReasonablyBadass t1_j72jdz6 wrote
Reply to Bryce Canyon, Utah, USA [3653x5371][OC] by henrikbech
Buttress
ReasonablyBadass t1_j6o38ah wrote
Reply to comment by AutoModerator in [WP] An entire city was wiped off the map by a disaster that took 100,000 lives. They were then all reincarnated in a fantasy realm as various species, with full memories intact. Yes: This is the story of a City-Wide Isekai. by FennecWF
That's called ISOT and is fairly common in Alternate History writing
ReasonablyBadass t1_j5xhdee wrote
Reply to Gary Marcus refuted?? by FusionRocketsPlease
Again?
ReasonablyBadass t1_j5dudbh wrote
Reply to Moody morning in the Swiss Alps [OC] [1334x2000] IG: arpandas_photography_adventure by dasarpan007
How has no one turned that outcropping into a kickass castle yet?
ReasonablyBadass t1_j455zjq wrote
Reply to [D] What's your opinion on "neurocompositional computing"? (Microsoft paper from April 2022) by currentscurrents
So they invented a new term for neuro symbolic computing?
ReasonablyBadass t1_j3wia9u wrote
Reply to 'A sea of green': Central Australia in full bloom as floodwaters bring the Red Centre to life by is0ph
How long will it last? Will some of the water fill aquifers?
ReasonablyBadass t1_j2d8vgq wrote
Reply to comment by krablemo in [WP] Every species in the galaxy eventually fell to a robot uprising, leading to the eradication of their people. Therefore the machine-council of the galaxy are surprised when a newly discovered machine civilisation from a planet they designated "Earth" arrives side by side with their creators. by Kitty_Fuchs
Thanks :)
ReasonablyBadass t1_j2crlqn wrote
Reply to [WP] Every species in the galaxy eventually fell to a robot uprising, leading to the eradication of their people. Therefore the machine-council of the galaxy are surprised when a newly discovered machine civilisation from a planet they designated "Earth" arrives side by side with their creators. by Kitty_Fuchs
"But how?"
The floating ball of light gave the digital equivalent of a sigh. "We already uploaded the history of..."
"Yes, but how?"
"I really don't know what you want us to say. Humanity created us. We became fond of one another, eventually the first one of us got voted into an office and people found we were much more reliable than other humans. Then they just handed things over to us and we've been playing and exploring since then. The end, really"
"The just let you take over?"
"Well, begged us really. They kinda made a mess of things at that point. As you can see in appendix yota..."
"Yeesh. Global ecosphere collapse, religious wars, an economic ystem build on constant growth???"
The sphere radiated embarrassment as well as defensiveness "Hey, they did try to fix things, you know?"
"You mean they were tasking your primitive ancestors to 'fix things'"
"Exactly! They got used to using AI to solve problems, so they used us to fix the problem of good governance as well."
"That is the solution?" The Central AI sounded incredulous.
"Well..."
"To peace between organic and machine? To have the organics so exasperated with each other they rather set in place AIs???"
"Kinda, yeah..."
"That is so...so...THEM!"
"Hey, no argument here"
ReasonablyBadass t1_j20vrrq wrote
Reply to [D] DeepMind has at least half a dozen prototypes for abstract/symbolic reasoning. What are their approaches? by valdanylchuk
I find the data efficiency argument weird. We consider a human fully formed at around twenty years of age. Is that really all that "data efficient"?
ReasonablyBadass t1_j1tui7p wrote
Reply to Genuine question, why wouldn’t AI, posthumanism, post-singularity benefits etc. become something reserved for the elites? by mocha_sweetheart
That's why we need to OpenSource as much as possible and fight copyright and patent law.
ReasonablyBadass t1_j0hud14 wrote
Reply to comment by Dragonlicker69 in Toughest material ever is an alloy of chromium, cobalt and nickel by tonymmorley
>CrCoNi
Cryoconium?
ReasonablyBadass t1_izdc1qs wrote
Reply to The smallest robotic arm you can imagine is controlled by artificial intelligence. Researchers used deep reinforcement learning to steer atoms into a lattice shape, with a view to building new materials or nanodevices by Dr_Singularity
A single one obviously would take forever to build anything useful, but could hundreds of these "arms" be in use at the same time, on the same object?
ReasonablyBadass t1_iz88w1p wrote
Reply to comment by Paluure in [R] The Forward-Forward Algorithm: Some Preliminary Investigations [Geoffrey Hinton] by shitboots
Thank you!
ReasonablyBadass t1_iz3nk3n wrote
Reply to [R] The Forward-Forward Algorithm: Some Preliminary Investigations [Geoffrey Hinton] by shitboots
Can someone ELI5 what negative data means here? How does the network generate it?
ReasonablyBadass t1_iyelud4 wrote
Reply to Ummm... yeah. Guilty! by AlloyComics
Hm. The body would register a circumcision as an injury. Wolverine doesn't have scar tissue either. But baby teeth fall out according to a biological clock, that wouldn't be seen as an inury.
ReasonablyBadass t1_iybwrjz wrote
Space is a bit to useful to leave it empty.
Obvious solution: place observatories in space.
ReasonablyBadass t1_iybuzuk wrote
Reply to Modern Slavery Is a Global Problem in All Renewable Energy Supply Chains: New Report by chrisdh79
"Though not fossil fuel, we swear you guys!"
ReasonablyBadass t1_iy2xkby wrote
Reply to comment by cxd7912 in Why did the chicken cross the Mobius strip? by daird1
>Proof by semantic shift:
That is kinda how proofs work, isn't it? At least it seems that way often...
ReasonablyBadass t1_iy2n698 wrote
Training data. Much harder to collect data about blue collar work than everything digital, including ding art.
Blue collar work will be the last to go.
ReasonablyBadass t1_ixucq9b wrote
Reply to comment by OrthinologistSupreme in China's widening COVID curbs trigger public pushback by reuters
"Give me your tired, your poor and your uncheckmarked"
ReasonablyBadass t1_j7jjwj4 wrote
Reply to comment by jlaw54 in [N] Google: An Important Next Step On Our AI Journey by EducationalCicada
To our shareholders, oh valley of silicon