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Alexei Starovoitov gave 'less of a presentation, more of a scream of realization' at the BPF t [...]
Lightweight and powerful code editor, available for Windows, Linux and macOS.
Discover the world of isomorphic keyboards and learn more about the story of the Janko Project!
At a time when concerns about inequality are high and public attitudes toward the ultra-wealthy have soured, Musk has managed to retain a loyal following.
This week, we launched the Field Guide to Grid Lanes at gridlanes.webkit.org.
(FWIW to you, dear reader, I did not use AI when writing this article) AI cannot desire. It can plan, and it can execute, but it cannot desire. If you desire X, you can use AI to come up with a plan to get X, and depending on the task, AI can execute parts or even all of the plan. But AI cannot want X. AI can plan an app and can build one, but it cannot want the app to be user-friendly/fast/follow a certain aesthetic/etc. You can want it to be all of those things, and if you do, you must tell it to plan for those things, because it cannot want to achieve them itself. What am I getting at here? AI is getting very good. I ask myself: What is becoming less valuable because AI can do it better/faster/cheaper than humans, and more importantly, what can't it do better/faster/cheaper than humans? I think the answer is desire. AI cannot desire. Some people have said that taste is what we bring to the table. I don't think that's wrong, I just think it's a downstream effect of desire. One has taste because they know what to look for, they have values, and they desire that the thing they're evaluating has lives up to those values. You get out what you put in. If you don't tell AI what to do, it will not think of it for you. It's not like asking a human to build or write something, because a human has its own goals, motivations, values, experiences, and ends. Get good at communicating your desires in writing. Cultivate your values. Learn to express them. It is one thing to have taste and values, it is another to be able to be able to express them in words. Criticism is valuable.
Three kinds of work, three success criteria, and why confusing them is costly. Early in my career I worked at Bell Labs, where one could work on any intellectually challenging problem, whether or n…
University of Nottingham is first of many, Shiny tells The Reg
This video demonstrates the general concept that makes a differential wrist joint work. Both motors working together achieve two degrees of freedom. submitted by /u/Icy_Hat_7473 [link] [Kommentare]
Just curious because everyone talks constantly about the bigger coins but there are absolutely opportunities in alt coins that have much larger short term gains compared to the whales of the market. submitted by /u/TartarusXTheotokos [link] [Kommentare]
I'm not usually the type to jump straight to conspiracy theories, but the price action has been extremely suspicious. Multiple times, I've entered a position and the market has moved exactly as I expected shortly afterward. Yet right before the move in my favor, there's often a sudden spike in the opposite direction that would be enough to stop me and likely many other retail traders and get us out of the trade. A developer friend once told me he had an opportunity to work for a firm in the Netherlands that specialized in exploiting retail traders' positions and liquidity. Whether that's what's happening here, I can't say for certain. Maybe it's coincidence, maybe it's market makers hunting liquidity, or maybe something else is going on. Either way, I'd be interested to hear whether others have experienced the same thing submitted by /u/erikpryda [link] [Kommentare]