banuk_sickness_eater
banuk_sickness_eater t1_jdyrtkp wrote
Reply to comment by Koda_20 in Talking to Skyrim VR NPCs via ChatGPT & xVASynth by Art_from_the_Machine
Doomers gonna doom. Go to r/collapse if you're only interested in adding your apocalyptic obsession to the conversation.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_jdyrkvf wrote
Reply to comment by Longjumping-Sky-1971 in Talking to Skyrim VR NPCs via ChatGPT & xVASynth by Art_from_the_Machine
I second this suggestion. Elevenlabs can recreate the the proper intonation and cadence of the original voice actor.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_jdvbu34 wrote
Reply to comment by Sigma_Atheist in "Non-AGI systems can possibly obsolete 80% of human jobs"-Ben Goertzel by Neurogence
Doomer.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_jcwz87s wrote
Reply to comment by nat_friedman in [N] A $250k contest to read ancient Roman papyrus scrolls with ML by nat_friedman
Thank you for doing this, doubling the corpus of literature from antiquity is absolutely a net positive for humanity.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_jbe8glq wrote
Damn, a thousand years after the advent of civilization, and 250,000 years after the emergence of behaviorally modern man.
Imagine just having to walk everywhere with all your shit all the time having no way to convienly carry any thing you manage to accumulate except for the muscles on your back.
The extreme poverty of life of pre-horse steppe wanderers must've been immemse.
I wonder what it must've been like for somewhere like China to see the vast ocean of haggardly feckless wretches always ambling around at your peripheries go from absolutely pitiable non-factors too suddenly start showing up to battles with the ancient version of nukes that completely fuck you up and topple your civilization every couple generations.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j9s7eex wrote
Reply to comment by Halperwire in Bernie Sanders proposes taxes on robots that take jobs by Scarlet_pot2
Everything about you screams loneliness. No one is going to miss you when you die.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j9q03dz wrote
Reply to comment by ironborn123 in Bernie Sanders proposes taxes on robots that take jobs by Scarlet_pot2
I really hope Truman isn't your choice of example for the efficacy of the businessman-President. Truman was a blithering dolt entirely unprepared and unfit for the presidency. He was failed local business owner turned pawn unwittingly wedged into his role as vice president (a role originally fitted to Henry Wallace) by the crony political muscling of Louisiana Party Boss Thomas Pendergast who wanted to reassert his Grenzsteifen by sticking his dick in FDR's birthday cake.
Truman numerous foibles and flaccid leadership directly lead to the runaway big stick foreign policy spearheaded by Secretary of State James Byrnes directly following WW-2 that so deepened the chill of Russian mistrust of American military intentions, that peripidiously billowed into the half-century long existential nightmare known as the Cold War- which humanity only recently barely survived the thawing of by the freezer burned skin of our collective balls.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j9pswkz wrote
Reply to comment by Halperwire in Bernie Sanders proposes taxes on robots that take jobs by Scarlet_pot2
Damn, you were wrong. It happens. Learn to accept that, update, and move on. Jesus lol
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j9f6r7b wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Does anyone else feel people don't have a clue about what's happening? by Destiny_Knight
What?
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j5ht9e8 wrote
Reply to comment by watevauwant in What do you think an ordinary, non-billionaire non-PhD person should be doing, preparing, or looking out for? by Six-headed_dogma_man
Malthusian doom and gloom is so intellectually lazy. It astounds me how enraptured people still are by apocalyptic narratives even though every generation since Christ has spent the last 2 thousand years screaming their heads off about how the end is nigh as life literally only got better and better.
Let slip the surely bonds of your limbic system and chill out.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j4nlz4m wrote
Reply to comment by Brilliant_War4087 in Researchers develop an artificial neuron closely mimicking the characteristics of a biological neuron by MichaelTen
Memories are stored in the balls
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j4nlt6p wrote
Reply to comment by Hazzman in Researchers develop an artificial neuron closely mimicking the characteristics of a biological neuron by MichaelTen
Damn idk why this is funny, is it funny because it tricks the ignorant? If someone doesn't know about neurons this is plausible sounding enough for them to just take it at face value.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j4hbc7w wrote
Reply to comment by 2bdb2 in So wait, ChatGPT can code... But can't code itself? by Dan60093
ChatGPT can't code better than a first year but DeepMind's AlphaCode can certainly code better than ever most median quality developers.
So let's rephrase the question to focus on AlphaCode instead of ChatGPT.
How does that change your response, if at all?
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j4cijan wrote
Reply to comment by Azecap in Breakthrough milestone in understanding the reversal of aging by duffmanhb
Sure there are a lot of adjuncts at colleges but there aren't many co-chairs of their department at Harvard.
I'm not trying to simply appeal to authority here, but that is a very lofty title at very respected institution. One article from Charles Brenner, a highly respected researcher in his own regard at an equally well regarded research institute- while highly troubling- doesn't totally convince me that Sinclair has lost the faith of a majority, or even a large portion, of his colleagues.
I guess my question is if he was such a quack, how does he keep his job and how does he keep getting published in highly prestigious journals such as Cell?
My guess would be there are opaque internal politics involved that those not behind the scenes aren't privy. Which would make this seem more like a collegial spat or personal vendetta settling than wholly honest critical peer review. But I'm very open to being wrong.
I'm sorry to pester, but I'm largely unfamiliar with the intricacies of this field. May you, or anyone who works in the field, please provide some more sources of legitimate criticism for Sinclair from his peers?
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j4bv2he wrote
Reply to comment by Azecap in Breakthrough milestone in understanding the reversal of aging by duffmanhb
Not well respected he's a Professor in the Department of Genetics and co-Director of the Paul F. Glenn Center for Biology of Aging Research at Harvard Medical School. He's literally at the pinnacle of his field. Show me evidence of his derision amoungst his fellow researchers.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j4br6go wrote
Reply to comment by phoenixjazz in Breakthrough milestone in understanding the reversal of aging by duffmanhb
Advancements in artificial intelligence will usher in an era of post scarcity, specifically energy post scarcity as companies like Google DeepMind begin to tackle fundamental problems in the realm of fusion.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j3nv800 wrote
Reply to comment by Cool-Particular-4159 in What will humanity do when everything is, well, eventually discovered by ASI? by Cool-Particular-4159
You've gotta live more presently dude. Why fixate on the heat death of the universe when you could be enjoying the 2^10 trillion million years inbetween.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j3ntb6m wrote
Reply to comment by bacchusbastard in What will humanity do when everything is, well, eventually discovered by ASI? by Cool-Particular-4159
A beautiful vision of the future friend.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j3nt1ta wrote
Reply to What will humanity do when everything is, well, eventually discovered by ASI? by Cool-Particular-4159
>What will humanity do when everything is, well, eventually discovered by ASI
The end of the Anthropocene and the begining of the Silocene.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j3nszz0 wrote
Reply to What will humanity do when everything is, well, eventually discovered by ASI? by Cool-Particular-4159
>What will humanity do when everything is, well, eventually discovered by ASI?
The end of the Anthropocene and the begining of the Silocene.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j3ndypi wrote
Reply to comment by a4mula in Arguments against calling aging a disease make no sense relative to other natural processes we attempt to fix. by Desperate_Food7354
>The problem with youth? It's wasted on the young.
Sophistic as it comes. Lmfao thanks for the laughs.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_j3ndkmr wrote
Reply to comment by a4mula in Arguments against calling aging a disease make no sense relative to other natural processes we attempt to fix. by Desperate_Food7354
>What causes aging? Time.
Lol I actually laughed out loud. Dude you're obviously out of your depth.
banuk_sickness_eater OP t1_j3blds8 wrote
Reply to comment by Loud-Mathematician76 in How to Prepare for the AI Assisted Life Extension Escape Velocity by banuk_sickness_eater
I mean don't commit crimes that require DNA analysis of the crime scene lol
banuk_sickness_eater OP t1_j3a4vdo wrote
Reply to comment by Babelette in How to Prepare for the AI Assisted Life Extension Escape Velocity by banuk_sickness_eater
It's just a recommendation as a type of insurance for the potential future where genetic rejuvenation could be cheaper or more effective with a save state to work from as a baseline than without.
banuk_sickness_eater t1_je0092d wrote
Reply to comment by Orc_ in Talking to Skyrim VR NPCs via ChatGPT & xVASynth by Art_from_the_Machine
Oh shit, maybe it was a Vall-E demo, but I distinctly remember feeding it Bill Burr's voice and getting back a fairly convincing Boston accented recreation.