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seewhydee commented on Nobel Prize in Physics awarded to John Hopfield and Geoffrey Hinton [pdf]   nobelprize.org/uploads/20... · Posted by u/drpossum
programjames · a year ago
This is embarrassing. I would say Hopfield networks aren't even very revolutionary in neuroscience, but they're so old I can't tell. In terms of AI... they've been irrelevant for thirty years. I guess you could argue a transformer is a generalized Hopfield network, but of course that's a post-hoc understanding. None of this has anything to do with physics.

So what if an energy function lets you approximate the number of macro-states it can capture? Should every mathematics paper with Lagrange multipliers be put up for nomination? Every poll that uses the law of large numbers, and thus, entropy? Surely the computer scientists building the internet need to be included as well, since their work is based in information theory.

Or maybe, hear me out, we reserve the Nobel Prize in physics for advances in the physical sciences, understanding physical reality or how to bend it to our will.

seewhydee · a year ago
Had they wanted a good ML relevant physics Nobel, the committee had decades to award a prize to Marshall and Arianna Rosenbluth for the Markov Chain Monte Carlo method. Would have been self-evidently important and relevant to both physics and ML. Too late now -- Arianna died in 2020.
seewhydee commented on FDA warns top U.S. bakery not to claim foods contain allergens when they don't   npr.org/2024/06/26/g-s1-6... · Posted by u/isaacfrond
ganzuul · a year ago
Doing the right thing would be a lot cheaper in the long run because a lot of people have mental problems from diet issues.

Subsidies for common allergens that become cheap filler is another part of the epidemic.

seewhydee · a year ago
Reducing the levels of allergens in food very likely has the side effect of promoting food allergies in children, due to lack of exposure during development. That's a strong negative consequence.
seewhydee commented on A TikTok ban would deal a blow to creators, businesses and the American economy   forbes.com/sites/alexandr... · Posted by u/jaredwiener
lp0_on_fire · a year ago
So the CCP can dish it out but can’t take it.

Until the CCP decides to allow a level playing field for US companies operating in China they can go pound sand as far as I’m concerned.

seewhydee · a year ago
Not sure how this is "dishing it out and not taking it". They intend to "take it"; they will force Bytedance not to sell, and thereby lose its US business with no compensation.
seewhydee commented on A TikTok ban would deal a blow to creators, businesses and the American economy   forbes.com/sites/alexandr... · Posted by u/jaredwiener
xyst · a year ago
This almost sounds like a paid article by TikTok.

TikTok has also “weaponized” their users to spam senators and house reps [1]

[1] https://www.theverge.com/2024/3/7/24093308/tiktok-congress-b...

TikTok is a scummy business

seewhydee · a year ago
I am old enough to remember US internet companies spamming users to support net neutrality, even those who aren't American and can't do anything about it. And net neutrality was heck of a lot less of an existential issue for them.
seewhydee commented on A TikTok ban would deal a blow to creators, businesses and the American economy   forbes.com/sites/alexandr... · Posted by u/jaredwiener
deathmachine · a year ago
Lol, they realize it's a sell-or-ban bill, right? Kind of a moot point when you realize that TikTok as we know it will continue, just without a connection to the CCP. Even if they do ban TikTok the company, the engineers/ML scientists who developed the recommender system powering TikTok still exist, so worst comes to worst someone makes a new company, hires the engineers, and off to the races
seewhydee · a year ago
Beijing has a veto on the sale, and are likely to exercise it. From their point of view, allowing the US to force a Chinese company to sell itself off as soon as it achieves success would set a very bad precedent, and encourage a torrent of other blackmail efforts.

They'll be willing to let Bytedance take the L on this. Bytedance can console themselves that TikTok can still operate elsewhere on the world, just making less money.

seewhydee commented on Why "Freakonomics" failed to transform economics   economist.com/finance-and... · Posted by u/Anon84
skybrian · a year ago
I think that, much like with Thinking, Fast and Slow, anyone recommending it needs to add a caveat that some of the results didn't hold up.

Ideally, there were would be revised editions with mistakes corrected.

seewhydee · a year ago
The trouble with doing that for Freakonomics is that the work on abortions reducing crime, which has been proven wrong, is the first chapter and the centerpiece of the book. It's the thing that they use to exemplify the "freakonomics" approach in the rest of the book.
seewhydee commented on EU chip goal 'unrealistic' says ASML CEO   electronicsweekly.com/new... · Posted by u/jernejzen
roenxi · 2 years ago
> What what is the "correct" percent to spend?

Quite an interesting question - theories range from 0% to 100% and everywhere in between. Empirical evidence seems to be that >60% causes a collapse of some sort [3] since nobody serious is doing that. And probably a floor of 20% since Singapore operates at 15% but doesn't really try to field a military and is a micronation. Anywhere at 40%+ seems to have problems with industrial production and innovation. I'd suggest there is a sweet spot at 20-30% spending on uneconomic projects, although obviously if that number can be reduced then more spending on uneconomic things means more stuff for everyone.

If we look at the countries you suggest, we see 44% (Japan), 27% (South Korea), 16% (Taiwan), 26% (Chile). We see that GDP per capita improvement is worst in Japan [1, 2]. There is a bit of a link between high growth and low government spending. Of course, if a country is growing quickly and the government isn't spending much then government expenditure will appear low so we can't be certain it is causal - but we would suspect that fast growth isn't led by government spending.

My personal theory is we see economies grow, then people kill the growth and coast. The high-taxing economies are lovely places to live for a while, but are getting crushed industrially and have generally managed to get themselves into an energy crisis which is starting to have an impact on living standards. Coasting is a bad long term plan.

Until someone comes up with a number, we should at least experiment with zones of as close to 0% taxation and spending as can be managed without compromising the consensus essential services. That is the sort of thing China looked to be doing in Shenzhen and it worked wonders.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_governmen...

[1] https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/gdp-per-capita-worldbank?...

[2] https://www.ceicdata.com/en/indicator/taiwan/gdp-per-capita

[3] My guess is if we look at return on capital that is around the point where depreciation starts to overtake investment. And the symptoms of wastefulness go from sluggish--or-arrested-growth to now-obviously-shrinking-rapidly.

seewhydee · 2 years ago
> Singapore operates at 15% but doesn't really try to field a military

Singapore is one of the most militarized countries on the planet. For example, they currently operate more jet fighters than Australia (100 vs 94).

seewhydee commented on American Spies Confront a New, Formidable China   wsj.com/politics/national... · Posted by u/bookofjoe
seewhydee · 2 years ago
> Xi’s security-first state employs Orwellian surveillance systems that vastly complicate spy operations inside the country.

Grapes are probably real sour, anyway.

seewhydee commented on Commentary on Xunzi's "Discourse on Heaven"   alicemaz.substack.com/p/c... · Posted by u/exolymph
userbinator · 2 years ago
Discourse on Heaven, the successor to Discuz on Earth?

(Sorry, could not resist...)

More seriously, it's interesting to see the distinctively authoritarian line of thought even in ancient China; certainly explains a few things about their culture and society today.

seewhydee · 2 years ago
I mean, Plato argued for governance by philosopher-kings, not too different from the Confucian conception of governance.

What's more interesting to me is the skeptical attitude toward omens and the notion of heavenly will. That sounds really remarkably modern, and not at all what I'd expect from someone writing during the third century BCE.

seewhydee commented on Tutanota is now Tuta   tuta.com/blog/tutanota-is... · Posted by u/maheshrijal
maheshrjl · 2 years ago
Based on my usage tuta has a dekstop client & app on F-droid. Protonmail has neither.
seewhydee · 2 years ago
The desktop client is basically a web app, little different from running it in the browser. As for the app, I have been pretty unimpressed by it; performance is sluggish, and emails are displayed poorly (lots of unreadably small fonts with no options for text resizing). Worst of all, development seems to be either inactive, or so slow as to be undetectable.

I paid for Tutanota and started switching to it from Gmail, but the accumulation of inconveniences is starting to make me consider switching back, in spite of all the Google privacy issues.

u/seewhydee

KarmaCake day338June 23, 2020View Original