behohippy

joined 1 year ago
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[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

The advancements in this space have moved so fast, it's hard to extract a predictive model on where we'll end up and how fast it'll get there.

Meta releasing LLaMA produced a ton of innovation from open source that showed you could run models that were nearly the same level as ChatGPT with less parameters, on smaller and smaller hardware. At the same time, almost every large company you can think of has prioritized integrating generative AI as a high strategic priority with blank cheque budgets. Whole industries (also deeply funded) are popping up around solving the context window memory deficiencies, prompt stuffing for better steerability, better summarization and embedding of your personal or corporate data.

We're going to see LLM tech everywhere in everything, even if it makes no sense and becomes annoying. After a few years, maybe it'll seem normal to have a conversation with your shoes?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

I'm not sure either, Win 10/11 are pretty quick to get going and Ubuntu is not much longer than that. If I have to hard reset the mbp for work, it's a nice block of slacker time :)

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Halls of Torment. $5 game on steam that is like a Vampire Survivors clone, but with more rpg elements to it.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

These are amazing. Dell, Lenovo and I think HP made these tiny things and they were so much easier to get than Pi's during the shortage. Plus they're incredibly fast in comparison.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

I've got a background in deep learning and I still struggle to understand the attention mechanism. I know it's a key/value store but I'm not sure what it's doing to the tensor when it passes through different layers.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

Subscribed. That last episode of AAA was heartbreaking.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

My neighbour has that same beta, he loves it.

 

We used to ride the heavy dual sports through pretty much everything, but this mud hole got him good. He ended up trying to wedge out with a dead tree, but it knocked his chain off, making the situation much worse. Eventually we pulled it out with a z-line and got the chain back on.

If you're in a situation like this, and shit ain't moving no matter what you do, lie the bike over on it's side (yes in the mud) and pull the front and rear until you're on something more solid. Your paint will not thank you, but it's better than leaving it there to get recovery tools.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Technically this community would also be parasitic against !motorcycles which is growing like a weed right now. I'm amazed how well it did.

I had a 450L since 2019 and loved it. The RX is very tempting but I really need less hardcore bikes as I get older :)

 

Any warm day in the winter, I'll hit the trails behind my house.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Bad article title. This is the "Textbooks are all you need" paper from a few days ago. It's programming focused and I think Python only. For general purpose LLM use, LLaMA is still better.

 

I host a ton of services running behind my nginx reverse proxy (basic auth + lets encrypt). On the whole it works really well with nearly everything I throw at it. Lately, there's been a lot of gradio/websocket/python stuff coming from the AI community like the local llama and stable diffusion stuff. Not sure what's causing it but there's always weird issues when I try to reverse proxy them.

Does anyone have some magic settings that "just work" with these weirdo web apps?

 

Gotta ask the hard questions.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Any data sets produced before 2022 will be very valuable compared to anything after. Maybe the only way we avoid this is to stick to training LLMs on older data and prompt inject anything newer, rather than training for it.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Step 1) Have a bike that women want to talk about. I think that's about it.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

When I had a CRF250L, I'd regularly have women come up and ask how heavy it is, because they're thinking of buying one. I'd put the bike on the ground and show them how to lift it. So... weirdest thing is dropping my bike intentionally to let women pick it up for me.

 

He's 5 today

 

YZ250X. It was a perfect bike in a lot of ways. Sadly, I broke my right foot in an unrelated accident and couldn't kick it over anymore. Nothing but old man e-start for me now :(

 

Ryzen 5900X, 64 gig DDR4-3200, 2tb ssd,10tb hdd and an RTX2070. Hosting Stable Diffusion, various llama.cpp instances with python bindings, jellyfin, sonarr, multiple modded minecraft servers, and a network file share.

 

She's mostly good. Mostly.

 

I seriously love this thing. It's so good on the single track. Before this I was on a CRF450L and it handled well but the fueling was pretty bad for technical riding.

 

I'm very new to Lemmy, probably like you are. Feel free to post pics of your knobbied bikes, discuss upgrades or maintenance items. Your bike is probably handling funny after that last wipe out, so feel free to ask why :)

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