Whoppers are good but the risk of getting a bad one is not worth it. Ech
Whoppers are good but the risk of getting a bad one is not worth it. Ech
I got that banana for my cat. I think the catnip wears off or something but he still likes to have it near him.
I’m speaking my truth. XR Adderall, crack em open and pour em on me tongue. The caviar of stimulants
My only time-release capsule is filled with little beads, I just pop it open and eat the beads like pop rocks
I’ve been taking 6+ pills a day for years and still can’t get myself to swallow them. I just chew everything. Tasty painkillers and caffeine.
I’m stuck on the homological algebra exercise
Don’t think it saves bandwidth unless it’s a DNS level block, which IT should also do but separately from uBO
Eddie Bauer and Carhartt are my go-tos. Both carry tons of tall sizes. Wrangler has some too and may be cheaper.
I worked with Progress via an ERP that had been untouched and unsupported for almost 20 years. Damn easy to break stuff, more footguns than SQL somehow
This has nothing to do with Windows or Linux. Crowdstrike has in fact broken Linux installs in a fairly similar way before.
Sure, throw people in jail who haven’t committed a crime, that’ll fix all kinds of systemic issues
Catch and then what? Return to what?
Still not enough, or at least pi is not known to have this property. You need the number to be “normal” (or a slightly weaker property) which turns out to be hard to prove about most numbers.
It sounds like you don’t understand the complexity of the game. Despite being finite, the number of possible games is extremely large.
Looks just like my old fluff did 10 years ago :)
Well, we knew he was a shitbag beforehand, so that’s not really what’s in question
U good?
Your first two paragraphs seem to rail against a philosophical conclusion made by the authors by virtue of carrying out the Turing test. Something like “this is evidence of machine consciousness” for example. I don’t really get the impression that any such claim was made, or that more education in epistemology would have changed anything.
In a world where GPT4 exists, the question of whether one person can be fooled by one chatbot in one conversation is long since uninteresting. The question of whether specific models can achieve statistically significant success is maybe a bit more compelling, not because it’s some kind of breakthrough but because it makes a generalized claim.
Re: your edit, Turing explicitly puts forth the imitation game scenario as a practicable proxy for the question of machine intelligence, “can machines think?”. He directly argues that this scenario is indeed a reasonable proxy for that question. His argument, as he admits, is not a strongly held conviction or rigorous argument, but “recitations tending to produce belief,” insofar as they are hard to rebut, or their rebuttals tend to be flawed. The whole paper was to poke at the apparent differences between (a futuristic) machine intelligence and human intelligence. In this way, the Turing test is indeed a measure of intelligence. It’s not to say that a machine passing the test is somehow in possession of a human-like mind or has reached a significant milestone of intelligence.
I don’t think the methodology is the issue with this one. 500 people can absolutely be a legitimate sample size. Under basic assumptions about the sample being representative and the effect size being sufficiently large you do not need more than a couple hundred participants to make statistically significant observations. 54% being close to 50% doesn’t mean the result is inconclusive. With an ideal sample it means people couldn’t reliably differentiate the human from the bot, which is presumably what the researchers believed is of interest.
Yeah. Normal whoppers are crunchy. 1 in 4 whoppers is soggy and chewy and hard to eat