matt2001

matt2001 OP t1_jdfnpeo wrote

>Researchers at Stanford University have taken down their short-lived chatbot that harnessed Meta’s LLaMA AI, nicknamed Alpaca AI. The researchers launched Alpaca with a public demo anyone could try last week, but quickly took the model offline thanks to rising costs, safety concerns, and “hallucinations,” which is the word the AI community has settled on for when a chatbot confidently states misinformation, dreaming up a fact that doesn’t exist.

I hope this can be addressed, as it will be able to run on smaller computers.

>Despite its apparent failures, Alpaca has some exciting facets that make the research project interesting. Its low upfront costs are particularly notable. The researchers spent just $600 to get it working, and reportedly ran the AI using low-power machines, including Raspberry Pi computers and even a Pixel 6 smartphone, in contrast to Microsoft’s multimillion-dollar supercomputers.

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matt2001 t1_j9o03fn wrote

Chat GPT translation into English:

The article at the provided link (https://www.dn.se/sverige/mats-lofving-hittad-dod-i-sitt-hem/) reports that Mats Löfving, a high-ranking Swedish police officer, has been found dead in his home. According to the police, Löfving's death does not appear to be suspicious, and no crime is suspected.

Löfving was a well-known figure in Swedish law enforcement, having held a number of high-profile positions during his career. Most recently, he served as the head of the Swedish police's national operational department, where he was responsible for overseeing major police operations across the country.

The article notes that Löfving's death has been met with sadness and condolences from across the Swedish political spectrum. Many have praised his dedication and professionalism, as well as his contributions to improving Sweden's law enforcement capabilities.

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matt2001 OP t1_izr0zrr wrote

There are some good YouTube videos on how to do this. It's actually quite easy and safer than buying stocks when interest rates are rising. Especially, if you stay with short term bills. All of the major brokerages allow you to buy treasuries.

I plan on staying in short-term treasuries and wait for longer term interest rates to rise.

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matt2001 OP t1_izqx59z wrote

Interest rate paid by the government if you buy their treasury bills. You can buy various time frames. I've listed one month, two month and 3 month compared to a 10-year treasury.

We started the year with almost 0% interest and now we are at 4%.. The 10-year treasury bill is paying less than the shorter term treasuries. This often happens before a recession.

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