next up: “Great thanks we’re gonna sell all your photos unless you pay for a subscription. Gotta keep in business somehow!”
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- 18 Comments
bignate31@lemmy.worldto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•For the first time in my life, I have hit my deductible AND reached my out-of-pocket maximum. I now have three months of actual free healthcare, which is unheard of in the US. What should I get done?
11·2 years agooh. go get a therapist–not physical; mental. they’re insanely expensive, but you can spend the next three months shopping around and by the new year you’ll have found someone you like!
bignate31@lemmy.worldto
Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•Threw a wrestling watch party, made special food, and was very disappointed in the outcome.English
21·2 years agoinvite me and I’ll bring my own alcohol. spread looks delicious!
bignate31@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•“Model collapse” threatens to kill progress on generative AIsEnglish
4·2 years agoAnother great example (from DeepMind) is AlphaFold. Because there’s relatively little amounts of data on protein structures (only 175k in the PDB), you can’t really build a model that requires millions or billions of structures. Coupled with the fact that getting the structure of a new protein in the lab is really hard, and that most proteins are highly synonymous (you share about 60% of your genes with a banana).
So the researchers generated a bunch of “plausible yet never seen in nature” protein structures (that their model thought were high quality) and used them for training.
Granted, even though AlphaFold has made incredible progress, it still hasn’t been able to show any biological breakthroughs (e.g. 80% accuracy is much better than the 60% accuracy we were at 10 years ago, but still not nearly where we really need to be).
Image models, on the other hand, are quite sophisticated, and many of them can “beat” humans or look “more natural” than an actual photograph. Trying to eek the final 0.01% out of a 99.9% accurate model is when the model collapse happens–the model starts to learn from the “nearly accurate to the human eye but containing unseen flaws” images.
Yeah, I grew up in Fahren-wasteland, but have lived in Celsi-heaven for 7 years. I embraced it, and now when someone says “40 FUCKING DEGREES!!” I know exactly what they’re talking about. It’s hot. You probably don’t have an air con. It’s misery.
bignate31@lemmy.worldto
politics @lemmy.world•Trump Suggests He'll Flee The Country If Kamala Harris Wins
1·2 years agooh nice! I found the same labyrinth after 4-5 taps.
this is so exciting! I imagine in the next few days I might be able to get to the content!!!
bignate31@lemmy.worldto
politics @lemmy.world•Trump Suggests He'll Flee The Country If Kamala Harris Wins
251·2 years agoI just had a seizure
readingtrying to read this “article”. what do I even click to escape??
bignate31@lemmy.worldto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•If you didn't have to work, how would you spend your time?
3·2 years agooooh. design intricate sandwiches! sounds like a lovely holiday!!
bignate31@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•CEO of Google Says It Has No Solution for Its AI Providing Wildly Incorrect InformationEnglish
1·2 years agoYeah, the problem is how to sanitise effectively. You’ve gotta be able to find a way to automatically strip out “bad” things from your training data (via an “oracle”). But if you already had that oracle, you could just slap it on your final product (e.g. Search) and make all the “bad” things disappear before they hit the user (via some sort of filter).
bignate31@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•My wife was unimpressed by Vim
31·2 years agoit’s just reliable. especially with remote work, everything is “over ssh”, and you can create a very consistent environment with only a few config files
the amount of AI you can get into these IDEs is impressive, though. probably the only reason I’d ever make the switch
bignate31@lemmy.worldto
politics @lemmy.world•If Trump is reelected, Americans are planning to flee in droves
5·2 years agoI left the first time for Trump… but moved to the UK just in time for Brexit. Should’ve picked Taiwan I guess
bignate31@lemmy.worldto
politics @lemmy.world•If Trump is reelected, Americans are planning to flee in droves
222·2 years ago“…Americans are planning to flee in droves, and then will realise they don’t have a passport, don’t know any foreign languages, and don’t know how to get around without a car and will ultimately just stay put.”
bignate31@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•‘It went nuts’: Thousands join UK parents calling for smartphone-free childhoodEnglish
41·2 years agoI was with you until the “construction site and under the bridge” bit. It definitely takes a bit of imagination, but I’m not sure not wanting your kids to play on a site which requires the use of hard hats classifies as being “anxious”
bignate31@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Protesters Gather Outside OpenAI Headquarters after Policy Against Military Use is Quietly RemovedEnglish
4·2 years agoJust commenting to also get a name in that history book.
“Oh yeah. We knew it was coming. We were just waiting to see which one would finally cause it.”
it’s only real programming if you also use CSS
I’m a lurker, but want to contribute. It took a lot to get an account (and then got a bunch of hate because I picked lemmy.world), but I can’t find any guidance on how to create a new sub. Is there any advice on that?


It’s hype like this that breaks the back of the public when “AI doesn’t change anything”. Don’t get me wrong: AlphaFold has done incredible things. We can now create computational models of proteins in a few hours instead of a decade. But the difference between a computational model and the actual thing is like the difference between a piece of cheese and yellow plastic: they both melt nicely but you’d never want one of them in your quesadilla.