The progress of OpenAI since february has been pathetic. The other major AI LLMs have surpassed it a lot. I want to see how they will justify the investment.
obbeel
Engineering with biological material could be the next big thing in Green technology.
I treat my mind as a big great block. If something is disturbing me, I stop to put everything into place and move "all together" again. It works and I'm more productive this way.
I got nothing to hide. Or so the saying goes.
I think for the big apps like Whatsapp and Facebook it makes sense that the companies want to hide the features that give users control beyond the "standard" way of using the app in places where they cannot find it.
Fear of Small Numbers, by Arjun Appadurai
The phys.org article has absolutely no information. At least it links the worldscientific article.
Microsoft does research on cognitive decline in use of LLMs: "Nope."
Google does research on cognitive decline in use of LLMs: "Nope."
MIT does research on cognitive decline in use of LLMs: "Fine, I'll read your goddamn opinion on the matter."
Edited: The article is good, I recommend it. However, I find this "brain-only" approach to be too biased. Students and people in general cannot learn without external information. This approach assumes people have studied the topics beforehand and have knowledge in it, which causes biases on the study and beats the purpose of it, which is proving people do not learn using LLMs!
The article criticized the closing of the Internet by Tehran, but the Internet is clear vulnerability that can be exploited in times of war.
"you’re not really a man unless you hate women". This is so true. I wish I knew better why this rift between sexes is so useful in politics. When talking about sex, we have to seek what we have in common, not our differences. If sexual attraction was a problem for deep relationships, then gay men wouldn't always be together. This sexually divisive standard serves someone right. Women should look at this more carefully.
Liquid nitrogen in a pool is "stimulating" and generates an interesting physical effect. However, the point here in relating it to science is that there is some science behind it that gets the attention from people.
My argument is: people are naturally fascinated by this, but they're put away by the strict laws, mainly mathematical laws, put forward by this.
Not that mathematics isn't interesting, but you won't incentivize people to go to a spitting contest by saying how you spit correctly. People want to see the strongest spit.
I think that's all there is to it. If you can incentivize people into partaking on this endeavour (understanding chemical effects, in this case), you can bring much more value to science and people that are interested in it. You can, for example, explain interesting effects to people even though they're looking at a clear liquid (most acids).