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☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆ @ yogthos @lemmy.ml
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The Jank programming language

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Ex-FBI Director Comey and ex-CIA Director Brennan are under investigation by Trump Justice Department

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With ‘The Far Side,’ Gary Larson Pioneered the Art of the Meme

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MemOS, treats memory as a core computational resource that can be scheduled, shared, and evolved over time resulting in significant performance improvements over existing AI approaches

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Researchers Jailbreak AI by Flooding It With Bullshit Jargon

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‘It’s a nightmare.’ U.S. funding cuts threaten academic science jobs at all levels

  • LLMs and the human mind operate on categorically different principles.

    A bold statement given that we don't actually understand how the brain operates exactly and what algorithms that would translate into.

    Where the straw man?

    The straw man is you continuing to argue against equating LLMs with the functioning of the brain, something I never said here.

    All the verbiage used to describe neural network models has little to do with how the brain actually works.

    You appear to be conflating the implementation details of how the brain works with the what it's doing in a semantic sense. There is zero evidence that all the complexity of the brain is inherent to the way our reasoning functions. Again, we don't have a full understanding of how the brain accomplishes tasks like reasoning. It may be a lot more complex than what LLMs do, or it may not be. We do not know.

    Finally, none of this has anything to do with the point I was actually making which is regarding embodiment. You decided to ignore that to focus on braying about tech companies and LLMs instead.

  • the wasp nest has really come out in the comments here 🤣

  • I actually preferred Inventing Reality from Parenti

  • Does feddit have screening questions on sign up to make sure people signing up are actual fascist?

  • ^ how to let people know you have mental capacity of a 13 year old

  • This completely understates the gulf between what we call AI and how the human brain actually works.

    Way to completely misrepresent what I was actually saying. Nowhere was I suggesting that there isn't a huge difference between the two. What I pointed out is that, while undeniably more complex, our brains appear to work on similar principles.

    My only point was that the feedback loop from embodiment creates the basis for volition, and that what we call intelligence is our ability to create internal models of the world that we use for decision making. So, this is likely a prerequisite for any artificial system that has any meaningful intelligence.

    Maybe try engaging with that instead of writing a wall of text arguing with a straw man.

  • The all-caps delivery really frames your thesis beautifully.

  • All the evidence suggests that our own minds are also nothing more than probability engines. The reason we consider humans to be intelligent is because our brains learn to model the events in the physical world that are fed into our brains by the nervous system. The whole purpose of a brain is to try and keep the body in a state of homeostasis. That's the basis for our volition. The brain gets data about about the state of the organism, and interprets it as hunger, pain, fear, and so on. Then it uses its internal world model to figure out actions that will put the body into a more desirable state. From this perspective, embodiment would indeed be a necessary component of human style intelligence.

    While LLMs on their own are unlikely to provide a sufficient basis for a reasoning system, its not strictly impossible that a model trained on sensory data from a robot body it inhabits wouldn't be able to build a representation of the world and its body that could be used as the basis for decision making and volition.

  • I thought the game was alright overall, but it certainly did not feel like a Dragon Age game. The overall story was decent, however a lot of the dialogue was hamfisted. The real problem was that the gameplay felt like Jedi Survivor without the refined combat mechanics. As a result, combat quickly became tedious and repetitive. I also found that the NPCs were more or less fungible, and it really didn't matter who was in your party. This is a stark contrast with previous Dragon Age games where the whole fun was in scripting the behavior of different characters and coming up with clever ways of combine their abilities. Simply having kept the original mechanics, warts and all, would've resulted in a far better game in my opinion.

  • I'm just pointing out that it makes little sense to talk about how technology will develop in the next 5 years while ignoring the biggest factor that will drive the direction of technological development.

  • It makes no sense to think about the future of technology while ignoring one of the biggest technological developments to date. Whatever you think of AI, it's necessarily going to shape every aspect of technological development going forward.

    One example I can give you off top of my head is that traditional user interfaces will likely be going away. There's no need to have a complex UI the user has to learn to navigate when you can just use language to describe what you want. You will just ask the agent to find whatever information you need, and present it in a specific way to you. Think of it as having a personal secretary who compiles information for you, and makes presentations.

  • it's one of the most dangerous countries to visit for western sex pests and pedos

  • you really kicked the wasp nest with this one 🤣

  • Thank you for taking your valuable time away from huffing gas to share this invaluable insight.

  • Here's MIT Professor and former Pentagon advisor Ted Postol explaining why the Golden Dome is a fundamentally unworkable idea. He views it primarily as a political vehicle lacking genuine technical basis. Existing and proposed systems are easily foiled by the use of decoys, making reliable interception an impossibility. The proposed space-based interceptor system would also require tens of thousands of satellites, with launch costs alone in the tens of billions and total costs potentially reaching trillions, making the system economically unviable.

    The real danger of this idea is that even the perception of such a defense system's effectiveness could lead to reckless actions by leaders and undermine international arms control efforts.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D9Wzlqh7bIs

  • US threats mean nothing because the US has no bargaining power, and everybody knows this now.

  • I'm not here to win arguments with internet trolls. The only pathetic thing here is that you can't help but keep replying to me. It's lile a Pavlovian response.