f10101
f10101 t1_jegs5yt wrote
Reply to comment by lordofbitterdrinks in [News] Twitter algorithm now open source by John-The-Bomb-2
It will take time, but I'd imagine it should be possible to derive a method of determining this by observation.
Algorithms like this will have fingerprints.
f10101 t1_jc608bj wrote
Reply to comment by Franck_Dernoncourt in [R] Stanford-Alpaca 7B model (an instruction tuned version of LLaMA) performs as well as text-davinci-003 by dojoteef
What is the definition of "industry research" you are considering here?
f10101 t1_j931eps wrote
Reply to comment by Deep-Station-1746 in [D] Please stop by [deleted]
This already happened, splitting into dozens of niches - it's just the niches didn't reform on Reddit. The ML community gradually migrated from here to twitter a few years ago.
f10101 t1_j7kea8m wrote
I always find it curious that lot of these "godfathers of AI" seem to be a bit like this. It gets draining to listen to them, as they have a tendency to reframe any debate or definition just so they can be right.
f10101 t1_j7is2sw wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in [N] Getty Images sues AI art generator Stable Diffusion in the US for copyright infringement by Wiskkey
They undeniably did copy them for training, which is the allegation. Not even Stability would deny that.
The question is whether doing that is legal. Plain reading of the US law suggests it is legal to me, but Getty will argue otherwise.
f10101 t1_j5w5ejv wrote
Reply to comment by MildlyInfuria8ing in An ALS patient set a record for communicating via a brain implant: 62 words per minute by esprit-de-lescalier
Have you tried finding a way to speak to an experienced product specialist at your EMR software provider about this? It may be something that could be achieved in your existing solution with an elegant configuration change.
f10101 t1_j5w2z4l wrote
Reply to comment by _Skyhopper_ in An ALS patient set a record for communicating via a brain implant: 62 words per minute by esprit-de-lescalier
Did she lose the ability to speak entirely, or is it more that it's become unintelligible? If the latter, and you haven't seen this already, I came recently came across a google project aimed at speech recognition for non-standard speech https://sites.research.google/relate/
And best wishes to both of you. Hope you eventually find a way for her to more easily communicate.
f10101 t1_j55angk wrote
Reply to comment by Avelina9X in [D] Did YouTube just add upscaling? by Avelina9X
Not necessarily. This kind of thing will also happen if you chain upscaling, quantization, smoothing and sharpening techniques.
What's the video link?
f10101 t1_j4m8qg7 wrote
Reply to comment by MessyTapes1 in For those around that time how big was the band Sugarcult? by MessyTapes1
It was just such a perfect match for the vibe of the time.
It was a really optimistic time in a lot of senses. A world of primary colors (before everything gradually got darker with 9/11 and the resulting war on terror propaganda), and the music mirrored that perfectly.
Smash Mouth's All Star video is almost like a Rembrant painting of what the mood was as a teenager back then. Ha.
f10101 t1_j4m1utv wrote
Reply to comment by peedge0419 in For those around that time how big was the band Sugarcult? by MessyTapes1
It truly was. God the gigs were so much fun.
f10101 t1_j4lzc8b wrote
Reply to comment by peedge0419 in For those around that time how big was the band Sugarcult? by MessyTapes1
Yeah, I'm in the same boat actually - they sound vaguely familiar...
OP, there were a lot of pop-punk bands around that time. A LOT. You'd see entire festival line-ups that were pretty much just 100 pop-punk bands, a bit of ska, and maybe some nu-metal thrown in.
These guys probably had a following that any guitar band today would die for, but due to the sheer level of competition, didn't really capture wide attention.
f10101 t1_j3mkwxp wrote
Reply to comment by EqualityWithoutCiv in Drones Are Already Delivering Pizza, If You Haven't Noticed by the_remainder_17
There are food delivery drones in my area. You don't hear them. Their rotors are too big, and they fly too high, unlike infernal ratty photography drones you normally see.
You might hear them gently as they do a drop-off, but it's quieter than the car or motorbike that would otherwise be delivering the food.
f10101 t1_j39gflq wrote
Reply to comment by ApocalypticShadowbxn in Should I put Kanye back on my playlist? Is it ok to listen to him? by humphreyspsychedlics
> don't you hear the person's voice & the sound of the voice makes you think of the person & if you think of a person who makes you sick, it's gonna remind you how much they make you sick. so yeah, you can say you separate it, but realistically how much do you actually separate
I find this depends on what the artist is singing about. If it's something completely incongruent with their behaviour or beliefs, like say Chris Brown singing about women, I have to switch the song off.
But if it's something entirely unrelated, I don't really tend to get those thoughts as much.
f10101 t1_j1cmsob wrote
Reply to comment by judasblue in [D] When chatGPT stops being free: Run SOTA LLM in cloud by _underlines_
Just in case you miss my other comment - chatgpt seems to actually be particularly expensive to run in comparison to their other apis. Altman says "single digit cents per chat".
f10101 t1_j1cm39r wrote
Reply to comment by satireplusplus in [D] When chatGPT stops being free: Run SOTA LLM in cloud by _underlines_
Step 1 definitely explains why its responses often feel so similar to SEO waffle-farm content. I had been wondering where that aspect was coming from.
f10101 t1_j1b1itt wrote
Reply to comment by coolbreeze770 in [D] When chatGPT stops being free: Run SOTA LLM in cloud by _underlines_
> Or just pay .004c per api query?
"average is probably single-digits cents per chat; trying to figure out more precisely and also how we can optimize it"
f10101 t1_izwhslb wrote
Reply to comment by rePAN6517 in [D] - Has Open AI said what ChatGPT's architecture is? What technique is it using to "remember" previous prompts? by 029187
To confirm, 4k tokens is indeed what their FAQ says. https://help.openai.com/en/articles/6787051-does-chatgpt-remember-what-happened-earlier-in-the-conversation
f10101 t1_iyzh7v7 wrote
Reply to comment by lughnasadh in Google says they have made a significant advance in allowing humans to communicate with robots using natural language, and claim an "order of magnitude" increase in capabilities over previous approaches. by lughnasadh
I wonder if there is a significant difference between unskilled and skilled work once the threshold of versatility to do "most unskilled work" is met.
f10101 t1_iyak042 wrote
Spotify's collection of recorded classical music is vast, with many of the best ever recordings of pieces on there. Some famous pieces, such as beethoven's works, have 100 different versions.
It can be worth googling the piece, to see what comes up about it, and its history, and the different interpretations.
In terms of the range of difference between what the original might have sounded like, vs a modern interpretation, you could check out the Voices of Music version of Pachelbel's Canon, vs say the Neville Marriner version. The VoM version is performed on vintage instruments, and they try to adhere to what their belief of how it would have been performed, whereas Marriner's version is the more familiar version to our ears.
This is probably at the more extreme range of variance in interpretation, as the piece is so old, and little of Pachelbel's music survived. Interpretation differences for something like Paganni's work would be more subtle.
But what's most interesting, is how different interpretations can be of a composers works while they are still alive. Recordings exist of Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue, featuring Gershwin himself, in 1924 and 1927.
There are some quite noticeable differences in interpretation, even between these two performances.
f10101 t1_ixu867f wrote
Reply to Any bands with at least 4 guitarists by Due_Cause_5661
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E_Street_Band
This is a classic example. It looks hilarious on stage. The timeline at the bottom now suggests five for tours.
f10101 t1_ivj1s5q wrote
Reply to [D] At what tasks are models better than humans given the same amount of data? by billjames1685
To take an example where it's a fair fight, and the computer doesn't win by virtue of having more input bandwidth: RL models applied to narrow physical tasks.
These will often exceed human ability after just a couple of hundred attempts - Cart Pole would be an example.
f10101 t1_ivfvlft wrote
Reply to comment by RealJeil420 in English company Oxitec has released a simple, easy to distribute commercial product they say cuts Dengue Fever spreading mosquito populations by 96%. By just adding water, genetically modified mosquito eggs mature into males whose sperm cannot result in viable female larvae. by lughnasadh
Narrowly targeting very specific species of mosquito shouldn't cause major issues. Certainly compared to existing approaches to deal with them during severe disease outbreaks, which is basically to carpet bomb entire cities with insecticide.
f10101 t1_itlg968 wrote
Reply to comment by SSC_08 in [P] is it necessary to convert audio data from analog to digital? by SSC_08
Yes, exactly.
A USB mic is a normal mic that has a hidden built-in adc.
It sends you the digital signal over the USB cable.
f10101 t1_itk7xxf wrote
Reply to comment by SSC_08 in [P] is it necessary to convert audio data from analog to digital? by SSC_08
Yes. Or I believe you can use a USB mic that is compatible with the pi.
f10101 t1_jegslrv wrote
Reply to comment by Ulfgardleo in [News] Twitter algorithm now open source by John-The-Bomb-2
I wonder did they add that flag before or after the day when they accidentally made people see only Elon's tweets on their timeline: https://www.theverge.com/2023/2/13/23598514/twitter-algorithm-elon-musk-tweets