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levesque commented on Apple M4 benchmarks suggest it is the new single-core performance champ   tomshardware.com/pc-compo... · Posted by u/rbanffy
adezxc · 2 years ago
If only Apple allowed to run VMs and other software like Linux on their iPads, it would be a game-changer. Right now, the iPads are mostly limited to media production tools + everything else you could get in an Android tablet, so it's pretty pointless for a user like me
levesque · 2 years ago
Is there really no way to do this?
levesque commented on ‘No way out’: how video games use tricks from gambling to attract big spenders   theguardian.com/society/2... · Posted by u/PaulHoule
somenameforme · 2 years ago
If you reject the necessity of a monetary payout then near to all modern tech becomes gambling. Maximizing "engagement" has always been little more than a euphemism for addiction after all. And social media "engagement" is certainly destroying far more lives than gambling, not only in raw numbers but also as a percent of its users.

So many people claim to be unhappy or at least dissatisfied with social media, yet continue to spend hours per day on it, chasing those highly exploitative little dopamine rushes that drive addiction to it. And of course it regularly gets much darker than just wasting vast amounts of time. Even in a casino the overwhelming majority of people will at least tell you they're having fun. And in video games the overwhelming majority of people will not only be having fun with what they're playing, but also spending next to nothing on it.

levesque · 2 years ago
To be fair, the people quoted in the book don't seem to be having that much fun. But yes, most of modern tech seems to be exploiting the same mechanism, generating addiction.
levesque commented on Game design wiki   rosacarbo.notion.site/Gam... · Posted by u/janjoseph
briangray · 2 years ago
I would not recommend Blood Sweat and Pixels. While it does have details on publishing decisions and crunch of making games, it has little insight into any actual game development. It's more of a sensation piece on how difficult games are to make. GP seemed to be looking for design and pattern references.
levesque · 2 years ago
Absolutely, was thinking the same. IIRC it's also only telling success stories, so people burning themselves out but succeeding in the end.
levesque commented on As an AI Language Model   twitter.com/d_feldman/sta... · Posted by u/LeoPanthera
mensetmanusman · 3 years ago
If LLMs start writing a majority of HN comments, we won’t know what is true or not. HN will be noise and worthless then.
levesque · 3 years ago
For HN and forums in general, I think this will mean disabling APIs and having strict captchas for posting.

Beyond HN, I think this will translate in video content and reviews becoming more trustworthy, even if it's just a person reading a LLM-produced script. You will at least know they cared enough to put a human in the loop. That and reputation. More and more credit will be assigned based on reputation, number of followers, etc. And that'll be until each of these systems get cracked somehow (fake followers, plausible generated videos, etc.).

levesque commented on As an AI Language Model   twitter.com/d_feldman/sta... · Posted by u/LeoPanthera
grumbel · 3 years ago
I am more optimistic here. While LLMs allow you to produce tons of garbage, they also provide the tools to filter through that garbage, something we didn't have before. LLMs allow us to view content in a way that we decided, not the content creator. That's extremely powerful and lets us sidesteps a lot of the old methods used to manipulate us.

The risk is more in the LLMs themselves, as whoever gets to control them gets to decide how people are going to experience the world. For the time being I might still double check all the answers I get from ChatGPT, but overtime the LLMs will get better and I'll get more lazy, thus making the LLMs the primary lens through which one views the world.

levesque · 3 years ago
Predicting whether a text was written by a LLM or not is not trivial. What was the latest number by OpenAI? 30%? As LLMs get better, it seems like we won't be able to distinguish real text from fake text. Your LLM will be able to summarize it, but it will still be 99% spam.
levesque commented on StableLM: A new open-source language model   stability.ai/blog/stabili... · Posted by u/davidbarker
sanxiyn · 3 years ago
No. OpenAI haven't disclosed parameter count of GPT-3.5 or GPT-4, which are models used by ChatGPT. You may be thinking of GPT-3, which is indeed a 175B parameter model.
levesque · 3 years ago
Ah, interesting. Thought GPT-3.5 had the same structure as GPT-3, for some reason. GPT-4 would obviously be different.
levesque commented on StableLM: A new open-source language model   stability.ai/blog/stabili... · Posted by u/davidbarker
HarHarVeryFunny · 3 years ago
If you're comparing to ChatGPT performance then Vicuna 13B would be a best comparison point for something Llama-based.
levesque · 3 years ago
Isn't ChatGPT a 165B parameter model?
levesque commented on HuggingGPT: Solving AI tasks with ChatGPT and its friends in HuggingFace   arxiv.org/abs/2303.17580... · Posted by u/r_singh
levesque · 3 years ago
This read more like a technical demo than a scientific paper. Wonder why they put it on arXiv.
levesque commented on AI-enhanced development makes me more ambitious with my projects   simonwillison.net/2023/Ma... · Posted by u/duck
hutzlibu · 3 years ago
"Java (understanding the JVM and OOP concepts)"

I am pretty sure that you can programm java without knowing details about the JVM and I would think, that most java programmers do exactly this. I think only in high performance scenarios knowing more is beneficial?

But I have not touched java in a long time .. as I have indeed choosen the web as plattform.

But I don't feel threatened by the high school kids coming from boot camps.

Edit:

I know what a pointer is, so I can work closely with wasm libaries. I know algorithms and how to structure data and why I am structuring data this way in this case, so I can adopt in another case. I know how to achieve performant simple code. I know how to debug layers of code with sideeffects over sideeffects. Raceconditions, memory leaks, etc. (All a thing in js, too). Using and understanding the profiler etc.

Someone coming from a coding bootcamp, does not know this. He or she might learn it after years of practice, which is allright by me - but they are no direct threat to me, despite that I don't even really know react for example.

levesque · 3 years ago
It's not only about performance, it's also about maintainability. Codebases written by inexperienced programmers are extremely convoluted, nothing is decoupled and functions are extremely long and do multiple things. Extremely hard code to maintain or add features to.
levesque commented on Ok, it’s time to freak out about AI   nonzero.substack.com/p/ok... · Posted by u/tejohnso
levesque · 3 years ago
Anthropomorphization of a text completion engine. Humanity will not be destroyed by a fancy autocomplete bot. This is just alarmist clickbait, moving on.

u/levesque

KarmaCake day1240January 12, 2010View Original