[-] jansk@beehaw.org 2 points 3 days ago

Pretty much my thoughts, too. There were several elements that seemed really interesting but weren't ever fully explored, and the main drive or goal of the story kept changing. Definite pacing issues.

One in particular was this idea of Jinx as an icon of rebellion. They spent several episodes building up this idea of Jinx taking Silco's place as the decfacto leader of Zorn, but uniting them in a way Silco never could because she has become such an icon to the people. Then the werewolf daddy plot hit like a freight train and that whole build-up was forgotten about.

[-] jansk@beehaw.org 3 points 6 days ago

If you learn Rust, you'll find that you'd choose it over C/++ even without the brrow checker. Every little part of the development experience is just so much better.

[-] jansk@beehaw.org 2 points 2 weeks ago

You have clearly never experienced extreme pain. The last time I suffered a severe shoulder dislocation was almost like an out-of-body experience. The pain overwhelmed the ability to form coherent thoughts, it was like an electrical storm in my brain. The intuitive motor system took complete control as I writhed around, limbs flinging in random directions. I heard someone scream at the top of his lungs, and only afterwards realised that it was me.

Pain absolutely does have a physical component, and it is not something you can overcome just by practicing meditation. Though, I'm not saying that doesn't help in some scenarios.

[-] jansk@beehaw.org 6 points 3 weeks ago

It sounds like deductive logic to me. What is the difference between inferring and deducing? Not sure that I get it.

For example, an LLM may hallucinate the historical fact: “The Treaty of Versailles was signed in 1945 between Germany and France after the second world war” because it sounds reasonable. But armed with inferential understanding, it could realise that “Treaty of Versaille” was after the first world war and 1918, not the second world war and 1945.

Knowledge systems that we've had for decades could do that. Prolog can do that. The difficulty is in how to marry the different approaches with deep learning models.

[-] jansk@beehaw.org 3 points 1 month ago

There is a huge lack of content in sign language. Have you ever seen a wikipedia page in sign language ?

Forgive my ignorance, but I don't understand why this would be necessary? I assume that most deaf people can read so long as they aren't also blind. Is it more to give more opportunities to practice sign language?

[-] jansk@beehaw.org 1 points 10 months ago

And before AI we had "Thinking Machines".

Perhaps we should go back to that. OpenAI et al can brand themselves "Think-Tech"

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jansk

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