I read the previous comment. I tried to find a source they would prefer.
I read the previous comment. I tried to find a source they would prefer.
Oh man I definitely agree here. I’m a huge fan of that “better than a human” threshold. Roads are already very dangerous. One of the wildest things I’ve noticed is highway driving at night in very rainy conditions, sometimes visibility will be near zero. Yet a lot of drivers are zooming around pretending they can see. I feel like I’m in the twilight zone when it happens.
It’s interesting that they include phone brands like MobiWire and Blackberry, but not Google.
I didn’t say FSD was an LLM. My comment was implementation agnostic. My point was that drivers are less forgiving to what programmatically seems like a small error than someone who is trying to generate an essay.
Other than that it performed flawlessly for over 40 minutes in a live demo.
I get that this is an alpha, but the problem with full self driving is that’s way worse than what users want. If chatgpt gave you perfect information for 40 minutes (it doesn’t) and then huge lies once, we’d be using it everywhere. You can validate the lies.
With FSD, that threshold means a lot of people would have terrible accidents. No amount of perfect driving outside of that window would make you feel very happy.
When you get a MacBook you don’t need to worry about finding and downloading an external app for almost anything
I don’t think that’s really a fair complaint against Windows when Microsoft got sued for doing exactly that.
I like it especially if it works like a switch. Imagine how perfect your naps would be. You’d never oversleep.
It only works when your eyes are closed.
There’s a questionable outlet on Twitter that claims the flight attendant noticed “Unusual Repairs” before takeoff.
Bialik’s delivery of questions is really good. The only downside of her hosting is she sometimes has very long pauses before she says someone is correct. I’d heard speculation that it’s because she made a slip up early on when she awarded points for an incorrect answer and the producers wanted to make sure that doesn’t happen again.
Since Ken is arguably the Jeopardy goat*, he’s much less likely to make this type of mistake.
*Brad Rutter should be up there because he beat Ken a few times in tournaments of champions and was unable to have Ken’s streak because Brad was from the 5-wins-and-go-home era.
I didn’t really get the complaints. The trailers made it pretty clear that the romcom thing is a part of the show. I like a lot of different sci-fi, but I could tell even before I watched the show that I could get people I know that don’t like sci-fi to watch this.
Now… if they rolled out a Scary Mary trailer we’d all be having a different conversation.
People suggest using other search engines instead like Bing or DuckDuckGo, but the fact that they no longer support the “-” operator in search is annoying.
You can’t easily beat volume. I think people like to compare this to Digg’s death, but the Internet was much smaller back then and how many normal people even knew about Digg?
Official news outlets are sort of forced to call it by its official name. I feel like Western society has sort of agreed to that general rule.
Don’t forget to tell them that Samuel L. Jackson played Jamal’s father.
Terrible luck, but she’ll have the wildest story for her friends.
I haven’t experienced this.
Unfortunately, there’s no real way for any of us to know if it’s actually happening organically.
I was legitimately thinking of posting about that show to this community, but I wasn’t sure if people would think it’s cyberpunk because how heavily corporate it is.
I thought it was a pretty good show. If I recall correctly there were no public police, only private ones. Explicit price tags on justice always seem like a bad idea.
I tried to look through a lot of cases. It seemed like most every case was leaking information, threats of actual violence, stolen valor, or other generally agreed upon crimes. There’s truth to the notion that a government is more likely to look for crimes if you’re a specific person, but I don’t know of anyone in the modern US who goes to jail for lying about things the army has done. I use the word “lying” because Russia courts make the claim that that’s what happened here.
Also, there are more recent cases of Russia imprisoning someone for essentially this same crime.