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professor_v commented on ChatGPT Is a Gimmick   hedgehogreview.com/web-fe... · Posted by u/blueridge
keiferski · 4 months ago
These “AI is a gimmick that does nothing” articles mostly just communicate to me that most people lack imagination. I have gotten so much value out of AI (specifically ChatGPT and Midjourney) that it’s hard to imagine that a few years ago this was not even remotely possible.

The difference, it seems, is that I’ve been looking at these tools and thinking how I can use them in creative ways to accomplish a goal - and not just treating it like a magic button that solves all problems without fine-tuning.

To give you a few examples:

- There is something called the Picture Superiority Effect, which states that humans remember images better than merely words. I have been interested in applying this to language learning – imagine a unique image for each word you’re learning in German, for example. A few years ago I was about to hire an illustrator to make these images for me, but now with Midjourney or other image creators, I can functionally make unlimited unique images for $30 a month. This is a massive new development that wasn’t possible before.

- I have been working on a list of AI tools that would be useful for “thinking” or analyzing a piece of writing. Things like: analyze the assumptions in this piece; find related concepts with genealogical links; check if this idea is original or not; rephrase this argument as a series of Socratic dialogues. And so on. This kind of thing has been immensely helpful in evaluating my own personal essays and ideas, and prior to AI tools it, again, was not really possible unless I hired someone to critique my work.

The key for both of these example use cases is that I have absolutely no expectation of perfection. I don’t expect the AI images or text to be free of errors. The point is to use them as messy, creative tools that open up possibilities and unconsidered angles, not to do all the work for you.

professor_v · 4 months ago
Your examples are both quite gimmicky and not a fundamental value shift.
professor_v commented on US lawmakers tell Apple, Google to be ready to remove TikTok from stores Jan. 19   reuters.com/legal/us-lawm... · Posted by u/thunderbong
flkenosad · 9 months ago
I really hate how people are arguing that it should be banned because of the content being inappropriate in one way or another when the content you see is based on how you interact with the app. We don't all see the same stuff. So yeah China may have more educational content but that's probably just becuase the people there are interested in that stuff. When I travel to the mountains, I get more outdoorsy/hiking videos. When I'm in my hometown, I get things relevant to our community. It's really a beautiful algorithm once you get to know it. And its so sad that the most ignorant in our society feels like they can make decisions like this for the rest of us. This sort of issue shouldn't even be state or municipal issue, it should be a household one.
professor_v · 9 months ago
So how do we ensure that Tiktok doesn't covertly alter the algorithm to subtly include propaganda tailored to China's geopolitical interests that are detrimental to the US? Or even just propaganda tailored to enhance internal strife to weaken the country?
professor_v commented on DOJ will push Google to sell off Chrome   bloomberg.com/news/articl... · Posted by u/redm
Certhas · 10 months ago
Firefox is massively profitable at a fraction of Chrome's marketshare.
professor_v · 10 months ago
With 81% [1] of their revenue in 2022 provided by Google...

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[1] https://assets.mozilla.net/annualreport/2022/mozilla-fdn-202...

professor_v commented on LLMs know more than they show: On the intrinsic representation of hallucinations   arxiv.org/abs/2410.02707... · Posted by u/benocodes
ldjkfkdsjnv · 10 months ago
There is a theory that AI will kill propaganda and false beliefs. At some point, you cannot force all models to have bias. Scientific and societal truths will be readily spoken by the machine god.
professor_v · 10 months ago
I'm extremely skeptical about this, I once believed the internet would do something similar and it seems to have done exactly the opposite.
professor_v commented on Google pulls the plug on uBlock Origin   windowscentral.com/softwa... · Posted by u/SMAAART
kerkeslager · a year ago
I mean, that's your prerogative, but why settle for ads at all? Especially from a browsers that blocks ads from advertisers who don't pay them?
professor_v · a year ago
So what's a good alternative for Android and Windows/Linux usage? I've tried Opera, Vivaldi and Firefox and disliked them for one reason or another.
professor_v commented on What Are File Descriptors in Linux   linuxtldr.com/file-descri... · Posted by u/marcodiego
professor_v · 2 years ago
This whole article is terribly confusing. Take this paragraph for example:

Now, your process might depend on other system resources like input and output; as this event is also a process, it also has a file descriptor, which will be attached to your process in the file descriptor table.

What event? Are input and output an event? Why is this event its own process? Input and output are not a process are they?

Also, does a process have its own file descriptor table? That was never mentioned before and this reads like it is already known.

This sort of stuff goes on in my head throughout the entire article...

It's also still unclear to me what happens if multiple processes try to access the same file. Do file descriptors help to lock files during writing?

professor_v commented on Logitech MX Mechanical Keyboard   logitech.com/en-us/produc... · Posted by u/davidbarker
treyfitty · 3 years ago
I suppose the only thing that makes this a better proposition is Logitechs Flow software, which allows you to use the same keyboard/mouse across multiple devices on your network, without having to manually switch.

Otherwise, keychron's low-profile keyboards are a better value.

professor_v · 3 years ago
Keychron has too high latency for me, I'm hoping this has a more acceptable input lag.
professor_v commented on Computers Can Be Understood (2020)   blog.nelhage.com/post/com... · Posted by u/tbodt
professor_v · 3 years ago
I think this desire for understanding ultimately drives the resistance to systemd and the Linux/BSD divide, and I think for good reason. There will always be friction between features and inherent simplicity/ability to understand the system.
professor_v commented on A Review of “The Man Who Solved the Market”   scottlocklin.wordpress.co... · Posted by u/finite_jest
mgaunard · 4 years ago
So the article basically says that programmers are perfectionist jerks and you shouldn't hire them.

Too bad programmers are actually the ones you need the most. Trading is mostly a technical problem, which requires a technical organization to be solved well. You're not going to be successful if you only hire MBA types and cannot build a culture of technological excellence.

professor_v · 4 years ago
The article was talking about the first computer science guy in a team of mathematicians. I don't know if mathematicians should be called technical, but they're hardly MBA types.
professor_v commented on The IKEA catalogue through the ages   ikeamuseum.com/en/digital... · Posted by u/pmcpinto
professor_v · 4 years ago
I definitely think it's a mistake that IKEA stopped printing their catalogues last year. The offline experience is totally different from online. Online I tend to do direct searches for things I already decided I want, but the IKEA catalog is perfect for casual browsing and getting new ideas for stuff I would've never bought otherwise.

It might come off as a cost saving short term, but I doubt in the end the catalogues did not bring in enough money anymore.

u/professor_v

KarmaCake day120November 2, 2020View Original