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Posts
4
Comments
810
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Reasoning and "thinking" can arise as emergent properties of this system. Not everything the model says is backed up by direct data. As you surely know, you've heard of AI hallucinations.

    I believe the researchers in that experiment allowed the model to write out its thoughts to a separate place where only they could read them.

    By god, watch the video and not the crappy AI-generated summary. This man is one of the best AI safety explainers in the world. You don't have to agree with everything he says, but I think you'll agree with the vast majority of it.

  • Imagine that 120 cent is 1$ haha

    It's not that crazy https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coins_of_the_pound_sterling#Pre-decimal_coinage

    • £1 = 20 shillings (20s).
    • 1 shilling = 12 pence (12d).

    I'm big on metric but there's nothing weird or wrong about non-decimal subdivisions. People have intuition about whichever system they're used to. The true sin of so-called imperial units is that they're ambiguous: a mile can be a nautical mile or a survey mile or any of these other miles. Volume is totally broken: US and UK have incompatible definitions for fl oz, 'cup' has many different definitions and is easily confused for "however much liquid fits in your cup" so is basically meaningless, and 'gallon' has three values that are wildly different from each other. If you follow a recipe from the other side of the pond, you better make sure you're using the right foreign measuring cup.

  • IDK about english-speaking places, but in Hebrew we'd say "meter 70". I never thought about whether this is strictly grammatical in Hebrew, but by the descriptive approach I guess it must be because it's commonly used.

    Edit: but it doesn't really work when you want to write it as a number so you'd have to write either 1.70m or 170 cm (if you prefer 1m 70cm that's fine but it's two numbers)

  • This is the sole reason why decimal time, which was also part of the metric system when it was first used, never caught on. The benefits of metric are that it's unambiguous and standard, but that was already the case for time so there wasn't any reason for it to change.

    Worth noting though, parts of the world use a different calendar system, but AFAIK the Gregorian calendar is unambiguously the one used when communicating internationally. Good thing other calendars don't share month names with it (I think?) and that no one uses the Julian calendar anymore.

  • As someone else said, decimeters aren't actually used by anyone. In fact, other than centimetres and decibels, I can't think of any commonly-used unit that uses a prefix that isn't a power of 1000. (kilo, mega, milli, micro, etc. are all powers of 1000)