Arto Vuori

@dhpe
43 Followers
26 Following
53 Posts

Hacker@W/. Founder Usetrace, attractive.ai.

#finland #tech #startups #programming #chess #cybersecurity #software #compsci

Reading List - Lex Fridman

Reading List: The following is an ever-evolving list of books I’m hoping to read (or in many cases re-read) in 2023. Classics, sci-fi, nonfiction, or anything people highly recommend. Some are short stories, some are long books. I try to alternate very short books with long ones. Motivation for Selection: I noticed that in the past few years, I started reading a lot more nonfiction, and that it’s been a while since I revisited many of the books that had a big impact on my life (by Dostoevsky, Camus, Hesse, etc.) Also, an obvious giant gap in my reading has

Lex Fridman
No better investment for the free world and the law-based world order than Ukrainian military at the moment.

There was once a dream of a decentralised web.

As recently as a decade ago we had a still very active blogosphere, connected via blogrolls and RSS. Specialised web forums were still mainstream and messenger apps could largely interoperate.

Centralised social media slowly ate that dream. It had plenty of positives, but it pulled more and more people away from the open web and into corporate walled gardens.

Some people kept the dream of decentralisation alive. And now you are here.

#ChatGPT can be persuaded: it first expressed concern for murdered Russian opposition leaders (when we discussed Russia), but twice refused tell who it was referring to. When I said that it can't just claim something without concrete examples, it finally listed Nemtsov and a couple of more valid examples.
A snippet from #AndrejKarpathy chat with #LexFridman. Andrej suggests (or makes a hypothesis) that language models may not need special architecture for having long-term memory. It may be enough to explain the idea for them in plain English, and they just may get it.
A funny detail on #ChatGPT, if you prompt it not in English to write code, it uses the same language to comment the code as I prompted. I have never seen anyone seriously writing code to comment in any other language than English. Funny that this has gone unnoticed by the neural network. Or maybe I am the one in a minority bubble, not ChatGPT.
Had a feeling I have arrived in future when I pasted #ChatGPT generated #Python program (based on a prompt I gave in *Finnish*, write a movement detector using the webcam), and it just worked, and the visualizations were looking cool.
Funny #ChatGPT fact: it makes off-by-one mistakes when doing simple arithmetics with integers.
#ChatGPT runs an imagined VM and accesses alt-internet. https://www.engraved.blog/building-a-virtual-machine-inside/ 🤯
Building A Virtual Machine inside ChatGPT

Unless you have been living under a rock, you have heard of this new ChatGPT assistant made by OpenAI. Did you know, that you can run a whole virtual machine inside of ChatGPT?

Engraved
@davetroy I sympathise with the concerns related to those large NN models "stealing" the creative efforts of humans. But honestly, where does creativity start and plagiarism stop? That question predates #AI. All of us are constantly producing contents that are obviously informed by everything we learned in the past. How is it different from #ChatGPT? Where do we draw the line? There are many cases of supposed plagiarism in music that are not clear cut.