rufus
No. I'd say the whole internet felt different 10+ years ago. Including this, what people are on here and how they behave. And I'd day the average intellect is different. But that could also be me growing up.
Yeah, doesn't really work. I mean it has a rough idea of that it needs to go east. And I'm surprised that it knows which interstates are in an area and a few street names in the cities. I'm really surprised. But I told it to get me from Houston to Montgomery as in your example. And in Houston it just tells random street names that aren't even connected and in different parts of the city. Then it drives north on the I-45 and somehow ends up in the south on the I-610-E and finally the I-10-E. But then it makes up some shit, somehow drives to New Orleans, then a bit back and zig-zags it's way back onto the I-10. Then some more instructions I didn't fact check and it gets that it needs to go through Mobile and then north on the I-65.
I've tested ChatGPT on Germany. And it also gets which Autobahn is connected to the next. It still does occasional zig-zags and in between it likes to do an entire loop of 50km (30 miles) that ends up 2 cities back where it came from... Drives east again and on the second try takes a different exit.
However: I'm really surprised by the level of spatial awareness. I wouldn't have expected it to come up with mostly correct cardinal directions and interstates that are actually connected and run through the mentioned cities. And like cities in between.
I don't think I need to try "phi". Small models have very limited knowledge stored inside of them. They're too small to remember lots of things.
So, you were right. Consider me impressed. But I don't think there is a real-world application for this unless your car has a teleporter built in to deal with the inconsistencies.
Thanks. Yeah I know most of the story/history of Matrix. I'm just now making the decisions for the years to come. And Dendrite has been the announced successor to Synapse for quite some time now... I'm not sure what to make of this. If it's going to happen soon, I'd like to switch now. And not move again and relocate my friends more times than necessary.
Judging by the graphs on my Netdata, Synapse plus the database are currently eating more resources than I'd like for just chat. Afaik the other projects were meant to address that. But I've never used anything else. And I've always refrained from joining large rooms because people told me that'd put considerable load on the server. If there's a better solution I'm open to try even if it's not the default choice... It just needs to work for my use-case. I don't necessarily need feature-completeness.
Yeah, with the multiple domains: I meant I have 1 VPS and like 3 domain names for different projects. I have a single email-server, one webserver and they just handle all three domains. Even Prosody (XMPP) has "VirtualHost" directives and I only need to run it once to provide service on all the different domains. With Matrix this doesn't seem to be the case... I'd need to launch 3 different instances of Synapse simultaneously on that one server and do some trickery with the reverse http proxy. That'd be more expensive and take more time and effort. I don't really care about how the identities are handled internally, I can provide them in a format that is supported. And the users are seperate anyways. It's just: I'd like to avoid running the same software three times in parallel.
Out of curiosity: Do you have to deal with that much spam? If so: Is there a specific reason?
Because I only get some bot join one of the public rooms and start spamming every few months or so. And we deal with that pretty quickly. My own account has been perfectly safe for years... So my experience is different. Might be my usage-pattern vs yours?!
Is this an honest question?
If yes: Read the info here: https://join-lemmy.org/docs/administration/administration.html
That is the installation guide.
If you're not that tech-savy I recommend using a self-hosting platform like YunoHost or Cosmos.
You have to at least put some effort in and google it and read the instructions yourself. Everyone is invited to run their own instance of Lemmy, and so are you.
You'd need a domain and some sort of server. Any VPS will do or some 24/7 online device at home if you can do port forwards on your home internet connection.
I'd invite you to have a look at it. If you're really interested, feel free to ask follow-up questions.
Regarding your other question: Yes, you can.
I'd say you don't neccessarily be gay to write some queer fan fiction.
Which model(s) did you try? I'm willing to test it later. Downside is, I mainly use smaller LLMs, live in Germany, in an urban region with lots of streets and different Autobahnen and it's kind of a hassle to deal with textual driving instructions anyways. ๐
I think they're using Widevine DRM. And with DRM they can enforce whatever arbitrary policies they like. They set special restrictions for Linux. I think Amazon set 480p as max, Netflix 720p and YouTube 4k or sth like that. AFAIK it has little to do with technology. It's just a number that the specific company sets in their configuration.
Quite some AI questions coming up in selfhosted in the last few days...
Here's some more communities I'm subscribed to:
And a few inactive ones on lemmy.intai.tech
I'm using koboldcpp and ollama. KoboldCpp is really awesome. In terms of hardware it's an old PC with lots of RAM but no graphics card, so it's quite slow for me. I occasionally rent a cloud GPU instance on runpod.io Not doing anything fancy, mainly role play, recreational stuff and I occasionally ask it to give me creative ideas for something, translate something or re-word or draft an unimportant text / email.
Have tried coding, summarizing and other stuff, but the performance of current AI isn't enough for my everyday tasks.
Go Ahead. I'm still struggling to find the time to learn Rust. I read the first few chapters of the book, but I'm a bit stuck due to too many side-projects. ๐
With Lemmy, I'd advise you to ask first. Lots of open-source projects gladly accept merge requests... But I think the Lemmy developers/community is a bit different. As far as I know a few people have been burned because they put in days of work and their requests didn't get accepted. That shouldn't stop you, I'd just say ask the devs first so you don't waste your time.