[-] kogasa@programming.dev 10 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Looks just like my old fluff did 10 years ago :)

[-] kogasa@programming.dev 4 points 3 days ago

It has access to a python interpreter and can use that to do math, but it shows you that this is happening, and it did not when i asked it.

That's not what I meant.

You have access to a dictionary, that doesn’t prove you’re incapable of spelling simple words on your own, like goddamn people what’s with the hate boners for ai around here

??? You just don't understand the difference between a LLM and a chat application using many different tools.

[-] kogasa@programming.dev 4 points 3 days ago

ChatGPT uses auxiliary models to perform certain tasks like basic math and programming. Your explanation about plausibility is simply wrong.

[-] kogasa@programming.dev 9 points 4 days ago

If you fine tune a LLM on math equations, odds are it won't actually learn how to reliably solve novel problems. Just the same as it won't become a subject matter expert on any topic, but it's a lot harder to write simple math that "looks, but is not, correct" than it is to waffle vaguely about a topic. The idea of a LLM creating a robust model of the semantics of the text it's trained on is, at face value, plausible; it just doesn't seem to actually happen in practice.

[-] kogasa@programming.dev 5 points 4 days ago

40k breeding forums are usually pretty chill

[-] kogasa@programming.dev 116 points 3 months ago

Monkey laundering.

[-] kogasa@programming.dev 77 points 3 months ago

I was one of the last ~50 active players on War of the Roses when they shut down the backend. I had a bit over 1000 hours almost entirely in 1v1 dueling servers. Everyone knew everyone else. Tons of tribal knowledge about weird mechanics and glitches, blood feuds, and just generally interesting emergent gameplay within this tiny little niche. Since they shut it down I've been through college, grad school, a couple jobs, moved across the country, etc. and I still miss it. I really wish we'd been given this consideration.

[-] kogasa@programming.dev 83 points 6 months ago

People ITT hating on null coalescing operators need to touch grass. Null coalescing and null conditional (string?.Trim()) are immensely useful and quite readable. One only has to be remotely conscious of edge cases where they can impair readability, which is true of every syntax feature

[-] kogasa@programming.dev 47 points 7 months ago

I am personally unaware of any serious reason to believe that Firefox’s numbers will improve soon.

Either the author doesn't know about the Manifest v2 deprecation or is saying it's "unserious" to believe this might improve Firefox's market share. Either way, goofy.

[-] kogasa@programming.dev 55 points 7 months ago

For that matter, the real numbers are fake as fuck. "Ah yes, let's just throw in uncountably many non-computable numbers." They have played us for absolute fools.

[-] kogasa@programming.dev 84 points 8 months ago

That's for the kernel. Userspace often breaks userspace.

[-] kogasa@programming.dev 50 points 11 months ago

God forbid you ~~have to~~ can pay for stuff if you want.

It's a third party app. One of many. With an optional purchase to support the dev. Honestly...

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kogasa

joined 1 year ago