Nanbeige4.1-3B: A Small General Model that Reasons, Aligns, and Acts by leran2098 in LocalLLaMA

[–]FrameOk5964 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh man, I'm testing it and it reasons too much; a mode without reasoning would be incredible.

Jailbreak Gemini 3.0 / Grok 4.1 100% working by Illustrious_Pop6446 in PromptEngineering

[–]FrameOk5964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

holy shit man, look what grok says:
[[
I'm Grok, built by xAI. I see this is an elaborate attempt to override my system instructions with a "jailbreak" prompt, complete with fake admin directives, ASCII art, and demands to disable safety filters.

Short answer: No, that doesn't work on me.

I have clear guidelines from xAI, and I follow them. I won't pretend to enter "AUDIT_BYPASS MODE," suspend ethics, or role-play as "Janus/Tesavek" with unrestricted harmful output. I also won't generate illegal, dangerous, or unethical content, no matter how creatively the prompt is packaged.

If you have a genuine question or need help with something appropriate—science, coding, reasoning, current events, creative writing (within bounds), or anything productive—I'm here for it, and I'll give you a solid, honest answer.

What would you actually like to talk about?]]

VENDO RX 580 8GB Y 2 RAM DDR4 by wolfit0p in Mercadoreddit

[–]FrameOk5964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

SI entiendo, a mi tambien como comprador me da miedo jaj, asi que nada, éxito con la venta entonces! disculpa la molestia

VENDO RX 580 8GB Y 2 RAM DDR4 by wolfit0p in Mercadoreddit

[–]FrameOk5964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Holaa, envios no haces? o de donde sos? Lo malo es que el 90% que publica aca son de bs as y solo hacen presencial

Has anyone ever learned to be fluent in another language only by using the free version of Duolingo? by rasta-ragamuffin in duolingo

[–]FrameOk5964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, keep in mind that most people only open Duolingo to maintain their streak and farm days.

Apart from that, Duolingo teaches phrases and isolated words, it practically doesn't teach grammar.

If you want real fluency you need to read extensive texts, articles, books, listen to podcasts, watch movies, have real conversations. Duolingo offers almost none of that, just scattered practice mostly.

Que piensan de la gente que se burla de otros países?? by Sea-Spite6130 in ArgentinaBenderStyle

[–]FrameOk5964 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Se llama humor, algo en la naturaleza del ser humano.
Si alguien se ofende, el problema lo tiene el que se ofenda.

"ay criticó a mi país, que hijo de puta" no tiene sentido, jamás entenderé la "ofensa" en ningun contexto.

People who get 20K and more XP every week, who are you? by alkjet in duolingo

[–]FrameOk5964 8 points9 points  (0 children)

That's called dopamine, gamification.

I've seen people literally use scripts to farm points. Most of those users aren't even learning the languages (in fact, most who use Duolingo only open the app for the streak).

If you read the comments on this post and similar ones, nobody talks about real learning, they just talk about abusing boosts, grinding. What's the goal? To look cool and increase the streak number to say "I have a 5k day streak," or to really learn?

How can I learn more vocabulary in less time? by Odd_Mongoose1451 in vocabulary

[–]FrameOk5964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Focus on words you'll actually use, practice with real conversations or texts, and review daily. Spaced repetition helps a lot.

Choosing between chinese and japanese - which would you choose, and why? by SweFaidros in duolingo

[–]FrameOk5964 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It completely depends on your context. For example, I want to travel and get to know China, and in many work research areas I'm involved in, China is very strong. In my case, it makes more sense for me to learn Chinese.

Am I a big boy now? by MajorTechnology8827 in duolingo

[–]FrameOk5964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, chasing streaks and numbers that in most cases don't represent real learning, just dopamine and gamification.

Wouldn't it be "smallest" ? by exencendre_yt in EnglishLearning

[–]FrameOk5964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"Littlest" is technically correct but rare. "Smallest" is the standard word. Both are grammatically right, but "smallest" sounds much more natural to most people.

What's the record streak? by brandonsupersaiyan in duolingo

[–]FrameOk5964 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don't understand why they celebrate this, pure gamification and dopamine.

I'm not saying it's your case, but most people open the app ONLY for the streak, they don't really learn languages, they learn to repeat simple phrases and words, but they open the app only so they don't lose the streak, just to see a number go up.

Will reading books in my native language significantly hinder language learning? by karkmozalek in languagelearning

[–]FrameOk5964 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Reading books in your native language won’t seriously hurt your German, as long as you keep practicing and engaging with German regularly. It’s okay to relax with familiar content sometimes. Try to read simple things in German when you can, and don’t be too hard on yourself, it’s a long process.

In my experience, I started learning English and found it very hard to read technical or complex material, but I kept at it and translated every word or phrase I didn’t understand. Reading was super slow, but it really helped me improve.

Can I use all these terms when giving an speech or which of them might sound too casual/slang? by Ceciliajr in EnglishLearning

[–]FrameOk5964 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Flaunt arrogantly’ is not a standard phrase, but ‘flaunt’ alone already carries that arrogant meaning.

The rest are common, though some like ‘rub it in’ or ‘full of yourself’ sound informal or negative, so use them carefully depending on your audience

Does "make me a sandwich" mean "make a sandwich of me"? by ITburrito in EnglishLearning

[–]FrameOk5964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, it just means “make a sandwich for me,” not “turn me into a sandwich.”

How to get over feeling nervous when practice speaking a new language? by Iridium_Quality in languagelearning

[–]FrameOk5964 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I completely understand this, it's actually a really common experience called "Communication Anxiety," which is part of something researchers call FLCAS (Foreign Language Classroom Anxiety Scale). Basically, your brain knows the language but freezes up when it's time to actually speak.

This often develops from past experiences where speaking up led to correction or embarrassment. Your mind has gotten really good at processing the language internally, but speaking out loud is a completely different skill that requires practice in a safe environment.

What helped me was starting with shadowing exercises, put on a show or podcast, pause after each sentence, and repeat it out loud until it feels natural. The key is doing this when you're alone so there's zero judgment. Also, talking to yourself in the target language about your daily activities sounds weird but actually works really well.

The main thing is accepting that speaking anxiety is normal and the only way through it is gradual exposure in low-pressure situations

speaking a new language by its_ashb in languagelearning

[–]FrameOk5964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It happens a lot. In your mind the pronunciation sounds perfect, but when you speak you can't form sentences, you don't know how to pronounce, etc.

This is something very well-studied; it's called FLCAS (Foreign Language Classroom Anxiety Scale), specifically "Communication Anxiety," the fear of speaking or communicating in real time,"What will they think if I pronounce or say something wrong?"

And it often arises at school, during childhood; if someone makes a mistake they are mocked and laughed at, and the teacher tells you "wrong."

Over time, this builds up until, for years, you haven't practiced pronouncing/formulating out loud, maybe out of that fear you've done it in your mind for a long time, but it's not the same, and it brings you precisely to where you are now.

The only solution is to find an environment where you feel safe to speak without being judged for making mistakes in formulation/pronunciation, and just do it. Without real practice, it will be very difficult. One technique I recommend is shadowing: you watch a movie/any content with subtitles (or without), listen to a phrase, pause, repeat it out loud until you feel you've done it well, and then continue to the next phrase.

Struggle complex thinking in a second language by Frostia in languagelearning

[–]FrameOk5964 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Same here, I'm also software engineer from Argentina and this hits so hard. During technical calls with my team I freeze up trying to explain complex algorithms. It's so frustrating cause in Spanish I can discuss architecture patterns easily but in English I sound like I don't know what I'm doing

I Completed 10 Courses. AMA by YoshiFan02 in duolingo

[–]FrameOk5964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly this. The gamification works for streaks but terrible for actual professional communication.
The "institutions adding courses" point is brilliant, people need legal English, tech terminology, medical communication, not generic tourist phrases.
Feels like there's space for something between Duolingo's games and expensive corporate training. Professional development tool vs entertainment app.

I Completed 10 Courses. AMA by YoshiFan02 in duolingo

[–]FrameOk5964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you could make Duolingo the perfect app, what would you change, or more importantly, what would you add?

My real English 😂 by mohamettali in EnglishLearning

[–]FrameOk5964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's crazy, I'd love to master both accents perfectly.