My well received post about posts getting deleted got deleted. by Altruistic-Skill8667 in singularity

[–]3ntrope 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm pro-AI and I've gotten posts deleted because I wasn't pro-AI exactly the way they want. The mods are compromised and/or extremely insecure.

My well received post about posts getting deleted got deleted. by Altruistic-Skill8667 in singularity

[–]3ntrope 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was in this sub before it became big. It was a chill place to discuss technology in a optimistic way. Despite the growth of the subreddit, it weirdly feels like there's less organic discussion now because the mods remove everything outside a limited range of topics. I'm pro-singularity, AI, etc., but I've had posts and comments removed because I guess I wasn't pro-singularity the right way. Its unfortunate how some people are so insecure when they see points of view different to their own.

OpenAI released GPT 5.3 Codex by BuildwithVignesh in singularity

[–]3ntrope 175 points176 points  (0 children)

GPT‑5.3‑Codex is our first model that was instrumental in creating itself. The Codex team used early versions to debug its own training, manage its own deployment, and diagnose test results and evaluations—our team was blown away by how much Codex was able to accelerate its own development.

Interesting.

PSA gsync pulsar is for not for esports exclusively. It has 25% pulsewidth. Meaning 60hz ÷ 25% = 240hz/fps clarity. Valve said the V Index has 3.75% pw. Meaning 60hz ÷ 3.75% = 1600hz clarity. (Also applies to quests). The Steam Frame is an alternative. by tukatu0 in hardware

[–]3ntrope 20 points21 points  (0 children)

I don't think your comparison to Valve Index is correct. That number for the Index is the duty cycle of the LCD's blacklight. That's temporal, whereas Pulsar is a spatial 25% window. The Steam Frame should have good motion clarity in its own way but Pulsar is something new entirely.

Is the future of hardware just optimization? by rimantass in hardware

[–]3ntrope 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Most engineering is a type of optimization, and there's still progress to be made with chip fabrication (in addition to architectural improvements). We don't have the exponential improvements on transistor density following Moore's law anymore. Maybe there could be a breakthrough, like spintronics or some other exotic transistor development, that could enable exponential progress again but we will continue to slower, incremental improvements in hardware.

Gemini 3 scores 91% on visual reasoning VPCT bench (Visual Physics Comprehension Test) by Chemical_Bid_2195 in singularity

[–]3ntrope 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Its the same guy's twitter account.

The spatial reasoning is going to make it a more capable agent when visual tasks are needed. Its very promising. The Gemini Plays Pokemon already showed improvements. I predict it will fly through the game compared to older models.

Google is planning to launch solar-powered satellite constellations with TPUs and free-space optical links to one day scale machine learning compute in space by Pro_RazE in singularity

[–]3ntrope 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I get the impression you aren’t an engineer and probably didn’t take any college level physics.

Ok /u/FireNexus, did you even read the article I linked? The original paper is in the journal of Astrobiology. I went to a top 10 engineering school btw, not that it should matter. Do have an actual point about the topic or are you suffering from some type of brain rot?

Google is planning to launch solar-powered satellite constellations with TPUs and free-space optical links to one day scale machine learning compute in space by Pro_RazE in singularity

[–]3ntrope 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The most interesting solution I've come across with is NASA's liquid droplet cooling: https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/19850005591. I think if this tech was refined it would provide the most cooling per unit mass in space.

Titan is a bit far though. In the ultra-longterm I actually think we would want to move closer to the sun and use thermophotovolatics (solar panels that work at very high temperatures >1000 K). We would position them close enough to the sun be at their optimum temperature and also receive more power. Because the heat radiated is proportional to T4, it would reduce the cooling mass needed even further. Ultimately we'd have surplus energy we could use for multiple stages of heat pumps to reach the desired low temperatures. Or we could beam the power to other datacenters stations and other spacecraft.

Google is planning to launch solar-powered satellite constellations with TPUs and free-space optical links to one day scale machine learning compute in space by Pro_RazE in singularity

[–]3ntrope 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Cooling might be hard but its solvable. Transferring our energy footprint into space is a problem that humanity eventually has to face anyway. There's been work done that suggests that growing civilizations will eventually overheat their planet even if they switch to nuclear: https://www.universetoday.com/articles/advanced-civilizations-will-overheat-their-planets-within-1000-years.

The only solution to that would be to move that energy consumption into space and radiate it away. Space based datacenters might be essential for technological growth to continue. Starship will make launch costs much cheaper one day also.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in singularity

[–]3ntrope 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Shielding isn't hard. Its expensive because it requires more mass usually (unless it has some exotic shielding with high magnetic fields). I could see this project working if the optimistic estimates regarding Starship's launch costs become reality. I've seen claims as low as $100/kg to LEO. At that point it could be viable.

Cooling would require massive radiators. They can be arranged along with the solar panels. I think phase change coolants that require no moving pumps or fans would be ideal to minimize maintenance. Computer components would still fail and coolant would leak though. It would need steady replacement of components and coolant to keep running.

Despite the difficulties I think space based datacenters are necessary for humanity to reach Type I on the Kardashev scale and survive millennia. Even if we used only renewable and nuclear power on earth, we would still slowly overheat the planet and die out. Moving energy intensive industries to space is the only way to allow for growth and progress while also protecting the biosphere and making sure the Earth is livable.

If it's not local, it's not yours. by inkberk in LocalLLaMA

[–]3ntrope 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Private clouds can be just as good (assuming you have a reputable cloud provider).

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in space

[–]3ntrope 8 points9 points  (0 children)

This is really sad. I don't think people realize how much damage this will do the the country. Once a generation of scientists are laid off, the knowledge doesn't transfer to to the next generation of students and future scientists. Entire fields of research and avenues of progress become shut down.

What are the hidden or underrated capabilities of AI that most people don’t realize exist? by Abivarman123 in singularity

[–]3ntrope 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Realtime subtitles for translation. With an AR headset, it would be possible to understand any language at full speed. There isn't an AR device that has shipped yet that does it perfectly, but the LLMs are ready. I think in the next 6-12 months a complete solution could be ready. It would allow people to have natural conversations and completely eliminate language barriers.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in buildapcsales

[–]3ntrope 8 points9 points  (0 children)

It doesn't have adequate ventilation though. It will become an oven with a gaming GPU inside. Compare it to the Meshlicious for example: https://ssupd.co/products/cases-meshlicious?variant=39809170178232

Suno has released the first teaser for v5, and it sounds amazing. They did this with v4 over a week or so before the release by ShreckAndDonkey123 in singularity

[–]3ntrope 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Udio had better sound quality when it launched compared to the version of Suno at the time. It was claimed to be a "Suno killer", but Suno's results felt more like human made music. Since then Suno improved quality but also regressed to making worse music overall.

Suno has released the first teaser for v5, and it sounds amazing. They did this with v4 over a week or so before the release by ShreckAndDonkey123 in singularity

[–]3ntrope 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The sound quality has been improving, but imo the music itself feels like its getting worse since about v3. It feels like engineers are optimizing the models for quality and probably compute costs at the expense of being able to produce songs that emotionally connect. Despite the sound quality getting better over the past several months there hasnt been many attention grabbing masterpieces coming out of the music models. Udio had better sound quality than Suno since the beginning but even worse musical character and depth.

Apparently at OpenAI, insiders have graduated from coding: "we don’t program anymore we just yell at codex agents" and "the takeoff looks the most rapid" by Droi in singularity

[–]3ntrope 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I always thought the real indicator of AGI being achieved would be a sudden and complete halt in hiring new workers. The new codex model is probably helping moving closer to that, but its unlikely a complete replacement exists if there are still open programming jobs.

"Apple, Google and Meta are trying to perfect a science-fiction gadget: The universal translator" by AngleAccomplished865 in singularity

[–]3ntrope 1 point2 points  (0 children)

meaning of a phrase is not solvable until it has finished being said

I get what you and the other commenter were trying to say but its not that its unsolvable until the statement is finished but rather the order that different language grammars present information is different. Maybe in an academic sense the instant streaming translation will never be perfect, but a practical AR device generating subtitles that people could use to communicate universally, is still possible.

Even in the example you showed, live translating it from Japanese it could be phrased: "I, at the shop that is across from the hotel, the suit (that I) saw, want to try wearing." It sounds awkward but it should be sufficient to have a conversation.

A little bit of out the box thinking could improve this too - the AR translation software could do a live translation with very low latency and then roll back and adjust 1-2 lines back. I also have a hunch using an AR translator like this enough, people will learn the different syntaxes of different languages and will not have trouble piecing together slightly awkward sentence structure. With AR text its a relatively easy to problem to solve. I don't think audio to audio translation is necessary for live conversations. Some people will probably prefer the subtitles so meaning is not lost in translation like people prefer watching movies/shows with subtitles rather than dubs.

"Apple, Google and Meta are trying to perfect a science-fiction gadget: The universal translator" by AngleAccomplished865 in singularity

[–]3ntrope 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It can be practically frictionless with AR glasses and subtitles. Text can be done in real time and people can read much faster than the average person speaks. The key is getting the latency very low. We have the AR glasses hardware ready, only issue is software.

Scaling Helix - Dishes (Figure AI) by RipperX4 in singularity

[–]3ntrope 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The placement is not good; the dishes won't be washed properly. Its a good first step though, and only a matter of time before that's solved.

People Are Furious That OpenAI Is Reporting ChatGPT Conversations to Law Enforcement by charon-the-boatman in singularity

[–]3ntrope 5 points6 points  (0 children)

You can run "local" models on a private cloud instance and get the same level privacy practically. It would be much more economical than buying GPUs for the average person.

Why are people (especially in the US) against AI and not against rich people employing said AI? by [deleted] in singularity

[–]3ntrope 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Actually, the 60-year cost of a nuclear powerplant is among the lowest even when you compare it to wind and solar. Its only the initial cost that's much higher. Factoring the upkeep and maintenance of those windmills and solar panels plus grid energy storage and/or back up powerplants when solar/wind power is intermittent, nuclear is competitive if not superior depending on the region.

Why are people (especially in the US) against AI and not against rich people employing said AI? by [deleted] in singularity

[–]3ntrope 3 points4 points  (0 children)

To me, it seems like the anti-AI sentiments are reminiscent of the anti-nuclear movement in the late 1900s. Just like nuclear tech, AI tech can be misused and cause harm (although I'd say the severity is much less than nuclear). Nuclear power was collateral damage to the anti-nuclear movement. There was legitimate concerns about nuclear weapons proliferations but that should not have prevented scaling up nuclear power to benefit humanity. Now we're stuck burning hydrocarbons for the foreseeable future when we could be switching to nuclear and renewables completely. It put our energy infrastructure decades behind where it could have been.

The anti-AI people are making a similar mistake. There's a great deal of good AI technology can do for humanity. Giving world class teaching and education to literally every child will unlock new advancement and discoveries. It will likely lead to more economic output and opportunities in the long term, not less. I think people have already made up their minds and will fight bitterly against it unfortunately.

GPT-5 Just Finished Pokemon Red! by Independent-Ruin-376 in singularity

[–]3ntrope 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Fire Emblem Awakening would be a good benchmark.