So am I.
mnem
Fun fact: I was in contact with LMG while in the GWN during one of their "work fairs"; they wouldn't even start negotiations until I had my work visa.
So am I.
Iterative Machine Learning:bd139 wrote: ↑Sat Aug 05, 2023 3:18 pm The stages of LLM excitement are:
1. Fear.
2. Enthusiasm.
3. Realisation that the phrase "shit in, shit out" applies.
4. Fear of people who get stuck at stage 2 or have investments and don't want to think about stage 3.
bd140 has just reached stage 4 after a rollercoaster ride of a presentation on LLMs and their therapeutic applications. In this case someone was proposing using an LLM to provide therapy to people. That was until I showed Bing gaslighting people and helping them commit suicide. Suddenly the decade of training a human makes sense...
On training it with its own data, reasoning will be like a JPEG that has been recompressed a thousand times.
There are people stuck in State 2 at work. They're old video people. I'll mod the JPEG analogy to "Betacam SP generations" and hope for the penny to drop.
Back in 1967/8 I drove around in MkII Landrovers whilst working for the "Postmaster General's Dept" in tropical Western Australia.
Meh!Specmaster wrote: ↑Mon Aug 07, 2023 12:22 am Tsk tsk, just because we Brits took the basic Willys concept and greatly improved it so it became the go to number one around the world for a 4x4 do it all.
I had a Mk2 in the 80s I sold it in an unroadworthy condition for the same price I paid for it. Allegedly it is still on the road, but I have my doubts. The one major concession to comfort was that the driver's seat had been replaced with a remarkably comfortable bucket seat from a Mini, held in by a couple of angle brackets.vk6zgo wrote: ↑Mon Aug 07, 2023 1:54 amBack in 1967/8 I drove around in MkII Landrovers whilst working for the "Postmaster General's Dept" in tropical Western Australia.
The seats were a slab of foam rubber straight onto a fixed part of the aluminium body, the one I mostly drove had one windscreen wiper operated by reaching up & flicking a rotary switch on the body of the wiper.
No wind-up windows, just sliding ones, ventilation was a couple of small rectangular doors that opened up under the windscreen, no door trim or roof lining.
Mine was "on hire" from another Govt Dept, the "Dept of Supply", who had been doing unknown things along the beach near Port Hedland & was delivered to Wyndham as "deck cargo" by the WA "State Shipping Service".
The sea water had got to the aluminium body & corroded it, so it leaked when it rained.
And did it rain? Holy shit it did!
When the "Wet" hit, water cascaded through the holes AND the ventilation doors, which had to stay open to slightly alleviate the windscreen misting (demisters? what are they?).
If the "officiers" thought that was pampering, they needed their heads read!