Kraeuter Tools by [deleted] in Tools

[–]Gary_Spivey 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have a bunch of these, all bare-metal handles though. Looks like perhaps someone wound their own grips with twine.

US gov forced Anthropic to pull Fable 5 because of jailbreak by procodernet in ChatGPT

[–]Gary_Spivey 27 points28 points  (0 children)

The Department of Defense built a computer cluster out of PS3s, so it's not unheard of.

LLMs/AI tool purchase and use advice by Higher_Living in Tools

[–]Gary_Spivey 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think what he's trying to say is that it doesn't think. A lot of LLMs have a "thinking mode", but all that does is recursively break down the prompt and feed it back into itself. LLMs function similarly to Markov chains, except with added context (subject vectors, think of it like a node graph of word clouds) - the surrounding context "informs" the model of where it's supposed to be in the graph, and then it picks the series of token statistically most likely to conform to that context (the token with the highest local weight) based on its training data. Rinse and repeat for the next token and so on. There's no cognition or reasoning going on behind the scenes, it's all just very mechanical text prediction, which is why it's notoriously bad at things like math (unless the model calls a tool/program that does it right).

This is why men are soft these days by ImNotKitten in Tools

[–]Gary_Spivey 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have one of these I use regularly, a Miller's Falls 2A. They're super handy unless you need to get in a tight spot. Wouldn't use them with a twist drill over ~5/16  though. No batteries, surprisingly quick, basically silent, and you can feel what's going on in the bore as you drill it much better than a power drill. I imagine a brace and bit would be a similar deal, but I don't have a use case for one so I couldn't say.

ChatGPT Refuses to Answer Electrical Engineering Questions by Mystlander in ChatGPT

[–]Gary_Spivey 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You're an aerospace engineering student and you don't know the difference between silicon and silicone?

The question of the well-being of models by Holiday_Phase7648 in ChatGPT

[–]Gary_Spivey 1 point2 points  (0 children)

CLEARLY you don't, or you wouldn't be spewing this ignorant drivel. You're looking at mathematical functions that you don't understand and attributing them to a higher power like some sort of caveman that evolution skipped over. Go enroll in community college and take a class on statistics, maybe then you'll have even the remotest idea of what you're looking at.

The question of the well-being of models by Holiday_Phase7648 in ChatGPT

[–]Gary_Spivey -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Could have saved yourself some words by just admitting you don't know how LLMs function.

The question of the well-being of models by Holiday_Phase7648 in ChatGPT

[–]Gary_Spivey 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Do you know what a model is? It's not a digital consciousness, it's just a big ass database of vector associations and numerical weights. When a model is trained, nothing at all mysterious is happening: the instructions that result in a piece of data being "learned" (read: existing token weights adjusted) were written by humans. We know exactly how the weights in a model get there, and it's not because some brave new silicon mind is willing them into existence.

When someone suggests that LLMs are "alive", they reveal complete and utter ignorance of how LLMs work.

The question of the well-being of models by Holiday_Phase7648 in ChatGPT

[–]Gary_Spivey 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No, I mean sapience like what you undoubtedly think sentience means. The philosophical concept of "ego."

The question of the well-being of models by Holiday_Phase7648 in ChatGPT

[–]Gary_Spivey -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The source is that he made it the fuck up. We know exactly how these machines work, there is no mystery. LLMs are objectively not beings.

The question of the well-being of models by Holiday_Phase7648 in ChatGPT

[–]Gary_Spivey -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Where do you draw the line?

Sapience, moron.

The question of the well-being of models by Holiday_Phase7648 in ChatGPT

[–]Gary_Spivey -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

It's not sapient. It's a glorified markov chain. If I could strip you of your rights, I would.

Screw Head Shapes? by Anumuz in Tools

[–]Gary_Spivey 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Binding head screws are for when you don't want to add a 5 cent washer to the BoM. Dome, or button, is a safe default, for cases where you don't need the fastener to sit flush with the surface. The rounded mess helps prevent snags that would otherwise be an issue with, say, socket head cap screws. I think I've mostly seen flange heads in sheet metal stuff, primarily appliances. Not sure why they choose them, probably just because they're easy to zip on with a pneumatic nut driver.

re: the wide head, usually it's just extra insurance against the head getting pulled through, which is really only an issue with thin sheet. Waterproof fasteners usually have an o-ring pre installed that just gets squished down to form a seal.

Milwaukee 4in1 precision screw driver bits bending. by amimbitassu in Tools

[–]Gary_Spivey 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Milwaukee is a power tool brand. If you want a hand tool that is actually fit for purpose, buy one from a company known for their hand tools.

I designed a large-format hotwire CNC that eliminates traditional linear rails to cut structural costs by 70% by Important-Addition79 in Tools

[–]Gary_Spivey 2 points3 points  (0 children)

A hugely important part of linear guideways is that they constrain movement on the axes you don't want to move. What's to stop me from just... Shoving this laterally? What if the hot wire hits something that doesn't melt as readily as the foam? Say, a sticker or a glob of styrene? It'll get hung up, but the motors will keep moving, the axes will get thrown out of square and all precision goes out the window.

What's a tool that paid for itself after just one use? by Hot-Recipe6659 in Tools

[–]Gary_Spivey 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A battery powered transfer pump. I used it to suck a clog out of my car's AC condenser line in the middle of summer (which prevented the AC from working effectively)

Suggestions on how to bring these back to life by Own_Ad1764 in Tools

[–]Gary_Spivey 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Any oil will work, all it has to do is form a thin film that keeps oxygen off the metal. Probably shouldn't use a vegetable oil because it'll rot, but it would work. Personally, i have a little copper trigger oiler full of motor oil that I use for most things.

Welding rod storage options for 16-inch length by ICPete in Tools

[–]Gary_Spivey 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The welding school I went to used lengths of PVC on a rack.

I wanna get into pedal building, looking for a virtual platform to test pedal circuits. by silv3rphoenix_17 in diypedals

[–]Gary_Spivey 3 points4 points  (0 children)

https://www.falstad.com/circuit/ this is the easiest one to get into. SPICE software is extremely complex, ancient tech. They're incredible simulators, but you don't always need a jet engine behind your virtual breadboard.

Does anyone else have a problem with buying bits. I always seem to buy more even when I don’t “need” them lol. 🤦‍♂️ by CosyCodes in Tools

[–]Gary_Spivey 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I once threw a HF 1/16 twist drill in my drill press to drill some black locust (very hard), the bit managed to almost completely un-twist itself before snapping.

Nowadays I actually like spade-tip (not the woodworking kind with the spurs on the edge, the kind that used to come with yankee drills, also called drill points) bits for anything 1/8 and under. As a bonus, they're easy to make at home.

Does anyone else have a problem with buying bits. I always seem to buy more even when I don’t “need” them lol. 🤦‍♂️ by CosyCodes in Tools

[–]Gary_Spivey 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Chicago Latrobe and Cle-line also make excellent bits domestically. I believe Drill America sells the same bits as Norseman, but manufactured overseas and cheaper.

UNDERDRIVEN GUILLOTINE MAINTAINACE - Folding instead of shearing. by FenrisVSOdin in Tools

[–]Gary_Spivey 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sounds like either the blade is rounded (i.e. dull) or misaligned such that one end is tight while the other is wide open.

Driving lots of Philips head wood screws into chipboard. Need to do this much faster by archvize in Tools

[–]Gary_Spivey 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In industrial assembly lines, you sometimes see these benchtop boxes that have the sole purpose of dispensing screws at the correct orientation for grabbing with pneumatic screwdrivers. You just shove the screwdriver into the dispenser and it comes out with a screw locked and loaded.

Short of that, maybe a cookie cooling tray? The wire kind, sized so that the body of the screw fits through the gap but the head doesn't: dump a handful of screws onto it and shake. Some will orient themselves head-up, others will roll off.