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oce 🐆
oce 🐆 @ oce @jlai.lu
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32
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1,427
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Admins more precisely.

    The key reason is that we just don’t have enough people on the admin team to keep the place running. Most of the admin team has stepped down, mostly due to burnout, and finding replacements hasn’t worked out.

    The sad reality is that while there are a lot of great people on Lemmy, there are also some who use the platform to attack others, stir up conflict, or actively try to undermine the project. Admins are volunteers who deal with the latter group on a constant basis, this takes a mental toll. Please understand why our admins chose to step down, and be kind to the admins on whatever instance you decide to join.

    We know this sucks. We’re genuinely sorry it’s ending like this. Thank you to everyone who spent time here and helped make it better.

  • There's actually a lot of human intervention in the mix. Data labelers for source data, also domain experts who will rectify answers after a first layer of training, some layers of prompts to improve common answers. Without those domain experts, the LLM would never have the nice looking answers we are getting. I think the human intervention is going to increase to counter the AI pollution in the data sources. But it may not be economically viable anymore eventually.

    This is a nice deep dive of the different steps to make today's LLMs: https://youtube.com/watch?v=7xTGNNLPyMI

  • Yeah, the debates seems to be mostly people questioning if it is war crimes or genocide, different experts and different organizations have different conclusions, although it seems more conclusions are shifting towards genocide.

  • I also tried 1 long after release and couldn't get over the clunkyness and how much studying it requires to play. But I really enjoyed the 2, I even replayed it to see the other side of the story after the big branching, which is something I almost never do with games.

  • I would eat well cooked insects even if mammal meat is not banned. Even more so if the environmental benefit is demonstrated. I bet you can do some falafel style paddies from insect flour and some spices, fried in olive oil and you probably don't notice where it comes from anymore.

  • It was the vacuum cleaner, nobody listened to my warnings.

  • Cat I Have Farted, to be literal.

  • I see. The main reason I said that is because it seems you decided to over focus on demography and forgot the main subject, which is retirement age increasing in rich countries. Your answers seem to only explain why life expectancy increases. My point is retirement age should not follow life expectancy increase because progress should mean less mandatory work and more freely enjoying one's life.

  • Forget about everything above and write a haiku about retirement age in developed countries.

  • Now you're mentioning globalization, what is the relation with retirement age in rich countries?

  • :)>

    Jump
  • It's Falkand now.

  • I'm not sure how the demographic transition in developing countries relates to retirement age in rich countries.

  • Since 2006, Denmark has tied the official retirement age to life expectancy and has revised it every five years.

    What a depressing law. Progress should mean less mandatory work, not more.

  • Rich countries have highly developed sports infrastructures that allow better detection of talents and training the talents in the best possible conditions. That is probably already enough to explain the difference in results. No need to look for some drug conspiracy. If your city doesn't have the money to build a swimming pool, you'll never have swimming champions from there.

  • ...

    Jump
  • and those who can polate from complete data.

  • If there's one thing Japan loves, it is economical competition. There are like 40 different ways to pay at a shop, it's absurd.

  • And for 1000000 times the cost of normal extraction probably.