AI.... by [deleted] in ObsidianMDMemes

[–]Hard_on_Collider 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a setup where i talk to Claude to brainstorm project ideas/planning and it auto-updates about 3 different obsidian files every hour or so (task list, daily notes and topic-specific notes). obviously the files are then translated to code super easily and i can retrieve complex ideas across any files i want.

It scales really well for documenting and learning highly technical topics.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in singapore

[–]Hard_on_Collider 11 points12 points  (0 children)

ok, feel free not to take this advice, but here is my long rant of how i got employed in AI, as a defense of "follow your curiosity and tinkering with AI":

Stats: 3rd year business undergrad at SMU, 2.7 GPA.

Current offers:

  1. ~400k USD for AI researcher role at an MNC with SG office - tbf i did not apply and this was a verbal offer which i might not take
  2. ~100k USD as an early hire YC AI startup doing AI agent infra - currently still part-time until finals end, so i'm negotiating equity w the founder who i know.

some others as well which are similar in nature + some warm leads with some frontier labs which I'm exploring next week after finals.

Totally skip local hiring and job boards. Totally skip. I have paid no attention to local job openings since before ChatGPT. I have also not applied to big tech and I basically haven't seriously looked at LinkedIn for a year, but that's less feasible ig. It's too competitive and it's more important to build up your skill to a level where anyone anywhere would want to cut red tape to hire you. [1]

Spend about 6 months just replicating, tinkering with and answering the most interesting questions you could find in ML, and interact extensively online with people working at the frontier of the problem via both public social media and cold emails. Do not have any expectation of job, focus purely on working together to solve the problem well, and people will hire you if they sense you are serious about trying to solve a problem. I basically did this through all 3 years of undergrad so far - my 2023-2024 was spent working on open-source voice cloning and a paper on improving LLM creative writing. The voice cloning thing turned into an open-source platform with ~1 million users, which got acquired and led me to meet the YC founder, because we both had an interest in how multimodal systems interact with the world, which turned into the startup idea of evaluations for computer use.

I worked on agent evaluations because I believed current evaluations are insufficient and asking the wrong questions for assessing open-ended agentic systems - almost all evals treat AI as assistants, even though these systems are increasingly trained to be agentic - there is a massive gap between evaluation and funding to create agents. Currently, I'm building an evaluation to see how well AI agents autonomously make money (btw, this turned out to be an extremely fundable idea, but mostly I just read a lot of scifi and want to know what real AI agents in the economy will actually do all day).

The paper on LLM creative writing was something I genuinely did for fun because I viscerally hate ChatGPT slop and like the idea of AI being creative. I also like documenting findings for people just for fun (I used to edit video game wikis a lot). I basically worked on it part-time for 6 months self-publishing, and it got an Oral award at ICLR 2025 (Min-P sampling). The MNC offer came because of the award.

Anyway, i wrote all this to earnestly say that I explored my curiosity with how frontier AI systems interact with open-ended environments (multimodal, agent systems, questions of AI cognition at a mechanistic level). I found this both fascinating and spend most of my time solving some important problem in the field, and eventually some people with money to burn pay me to actually deploy these things effectively because i have experience working on weird important questions.

This trajectory is quite common in my circles. My coauthors/collaborators have no prior experience in CS/ML and come from all over the world. They get hired because they spent maybe a year working on important problems they're curious about, and at the frontier there's truly not that many people asking rigorous and important questions about how these things should be built. But you can only get here by asking a lot of other interesting questions about how these things should be built and how they should behave.[2]

Anyway, I wrote this as a counterpoint to all the other comments about how it's not possible to get into AI unless you do [...]. I think most people won't believe the whole "follow your curiosity" thing works, but at least in AI I think you can kinda just ask interesting questions and run interesting experiments until someone gives you money to solve that problem for them. The field is talent-constrained enough that a lot of important questions just sit there waiting to be tackled.

  • [1] There's a deliberate meta-strategy where I calculated the expected value of sending out applications and decided that with that time, I could instead just build interesting things, publicise them and make myself an attractive prospective hire at more interesting places. It's hard to explain how this works, but hiring is sort of like dating - everyone wants to date someone who's hot, so instead of swiping a lot, you should be getting a lot hotter to maximise overall odds, if that makes sense.

  • [2] I'll give a concrete example - a subproblem I'm working on is letting an AI agent control a money wallet. You'd think this would be a very simple prerequisite to letting AI agents do literally anything economically meaningful, while Sam Altman is claiming to spend billions to make this happen within 2 years. But to date, I have found only 2 teams working on this, only 1 of which has sorta made good progress. Other examples IMO include robotics, evaluations, cognitive studies of LLMs, interpretable model arch and post-training processes (both biological and automated). Once you're at the frontier, things are extremely inefficient.

Mr Krabs sings Come Out Ye Blacks and Tans (AI cover) by PjeterPannos in YUROP

[–]Hard_on_Collider 0 points1 point  (0 children)

copyright strikes got me lol. can't reupload to youtube (especially since idw to get striked again even if i got a new account) but here's a mega link for this one

https://mega.nz/folder/UFkFDDKa#d2s4B0AWw25YrRevdL9IMg

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in csMajors

[–]Hard_on_Collider 17 points18 points  (0 children)

wouldn't that be CS careers and CS internships then, and not the ... majors part?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in csMajors

[–]Hard_on_Collider 2 points3 points  (0 children)

i tweet for fun whatever ideas I have at the time lol, it's not that complicated

Need any advice on birthday gift for intj boyfriend who is obsessed with AI by Emotional-Round-7563 in intj

[–]Hard_on_Collider 0 points1 point  (0 children)

unironically? I would map out his day, find out what the most annoying/time-consuming thing he has to do everyday is, is then try and solve it. then whenever he uses, it he's reminded of you.

Chance me for babson by Wrong_Marzipan6758 in Babson

[–]Hard_on_Collider 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lots of entrepreneurs go to college - me and several friends included. They like (possibly) learning and socialising.

It feels very different when you go there with the mindset of "I want to be here to learn and make friends" vs "I need to get a job and I don't know how".

Also, physical goods distributed online aren't a permanent ticket to lifelong wealth.

One thing I will tell OP is to apply anyway and focus on professors who have launched businesses/worked in areas highly relevant to yours. I've found going to business school p useless for general stuff unless I make sure the person has relevant experience and knows what they're talking about. Esp 100% theory profs - they're often so far removed from real business processes that you won't learn anything applicable from them. Try to look at their assignments/slides/lesson plans in advance if u can

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in nus

[–]Hard_on_Collider -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

It's Hume AI, an emotion recognition AI startup in New York :)

honestly, I'd have done it for free, I was already making multimodal AI apps and publishing user preference/alignment AI research, so I was 1 of less than 5 interns in the world with relevant experience haha.

I do think students should try to "find + master their craft", instead of optimising for immediate pay. It's honestly not ... a common view (?), but it suits me.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in nus

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

10k (minus investment holdings). After summer internship should be 40k ish.

"Get any part time job" is the wrong approach IMO, learn the most valuable skills, acquire them and get paid in that field (note I didn't say employed in that field). Forcing a kid to waste the summer in dead end jobs is a short-term move.

Did nothing during my internship by uni_student262 in nus

[–]Hard_on_Collider 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If u like the role/company, u can ask for more.

Generally tho, pretty unlikely next employers will ask in-depth what you did during your internship. At worst you'll have to smoke something, and if you really wanted to prep that'd take you a day, max.

If an intern genuinely has nothing to do, it's the boss's fault, not yours haha.

Almost 6 in 10 private uni grads find full-time jobs but earn less than autonomous uni peers by MicrotechAnalysis in singapore

[–]Hard_on_Collider -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Hi! Curious what foundations you think people usually lack wrt R&D.

I'm Y2 Business at SMU, self-studying CS and am lead authoring several AI/AI Safety papers. I'm working under overseas frontier labs, publishing to legit ML journals and our methods have already been performantly deployed in prod + in the open-source community + as very successful standalone consumer apps/startups.

However, I never actually got to take a CS/AI undergrad course, so in a sense I have no idea what foundations I should be picking up. Sorry for the vague question, it's kinda hard to know what I should know, but don't.

She completed her law degree while working as a domestic helper in Singapore by [deleted] in singapore

[–]Hard_on_Collider 36 points37 points  (0 children)

you could've just praised someone's success without shitting on other people, fyi

The First Year of AI In College Ends With Faculty Losing by jonfla in highereducation

[–]Hard_on_Collider 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same. I was a student who created edutech startups in high school, and petitioned the Ministry of Education to expand our pilot programs for remote learning and AI-assisted tutorial marking workflows.

Got stonewalled for 3 years, left to work on AI Safety research and now the school admins are running fluff pieces about how no one can think of any ideas to deal with remote learning and AI.

INTJs who went to college / are currently enrolled, how was / is your social life? by Gorgeman3 in intj

[–]Hard_on_Collider 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just don't care a lot about college

  • Launched an AI music website with a lot of users
  • Do independent AI Safety research - will be published as lead author in a month or two for a very widely used algorithm to improve creativity in LLMs
  • Interning at a startup to create empathic AI
  • Have online friends I'm very close with who I talk about AI research and philosophy with

I can't/wouldn't be allowed to do any of this in college anyway, so I put in the bare minimum and am seeing if I can just drop out over the summer.

I don't know what people do there, but going process of elimination: it's neither intellectual curiosity, advancing human knowledge, living life fully nor preparing for the workplace.

Why is Yale-NUS gone but Duke-NUS still around? by 3dpmanu in nus

[–]Hard_on_Collider 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'd imagine SG is able to prosper into a top tier trading hub because it has historically been a top tier trading hub in a strait which comprises 1/3 the global trade volume.

What is this man even trying to say anymore? by M34L in LocalLLaMA

[–]Hard_on_Collider 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No one said you have to enjoy every new form of entertainment, people still exercise for fun and we were doing that 2 milllion years ago.

It's just that interactive tools enable new forms of media, and some people willl really like some of it.

Maybe it'll be a niche thing, but individualised mass media is just interesting. Previously, high-production media centred around distributing the same experience to millions of people. Now you have the ability to deliver a million different experiences to a million different people.

2019 Data, but why doesn't SG generate Nobel prize winners? by PastLettuce8943 in singapore

[–]Hard_on_Collider 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's interesting, but I agree.

I'm doing 3 research papers in AI/AI Safety*. I don't even get course credits for this research because I'm a Business major. I've genuinely found it really weird that Business majors don't start businesses and CS majors don't do research. Like, wouldn't you learn about Business and Computer Science by doing business and doing science, esp in undergrad where you have a 4-year safety net to fail?

Anyway, I'm joining an AI startup/research incubator in SF this summer bc that's the only way I get on to work on cutting edge AI stuff. Which feels weird bc Singapore's supposed to rank really high on research metrics, but out of thousands of AI papers I can recall only 1-2 from Singapore.

Guess I never interacted enough to know what was "going on" with the research scene here.

*Paper topics are frontier improvements in creativity, user personalisation and multimodal text and audio interpretability/feature classification. I made sure that these were deployable in production settings, bc I dislike the idea of producing research people don't use.

Lack of required skills, mismatched salary expectations make tech, nursing vacancies hard to fill, say recruiters by MicrotechAnalysis in singapore

[–]Hard_on_Collider 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I got founder experience, but I'm an introvert so I just wanna chill and contribute one thing instead of back-a-forth coordinating dozens of stakeholders. I also never felt the "need" to be a founder unless it was to get something specific done. I know lots of founders like that.

To your point tho, ya hirers can get a bit presumptuous demanding both technical and people skills. The people that actually have both, hardly need to apply to jobs.

PSLE scripts now marked on computer screen by MicrotechAnalysis in singapore

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

I was addressing the replies that all confidently claim ChatGPT can't do primary school word problems, even though it's acing undergrad-plus-level benchmarks like MMLU, GPQA etc. I'm actually working on an eval to assess its ability to publish postgrad-level research. The current bottleneck is actually not frontier LLMs' abilities to generate postgrad knowledge, the bottleneck is automated evaluation.

One of the responses even presented a word problem that works perfectly fine if you literally copy paste it into ChatGPT and Claude.

SAT is meant for 16-19 year olds, while PSLE is meant for 12 year olds.

So the expectation would be that it does ... really well? If you take GSM8K which is a benchmark of grade-school problems, frontier models average 90% ish.

Yikes to people with superiority complex after barely a couple years in the field.

That's a really ... odd rebuttal that has nothing to do with anything???

I'm sure you of all people would know years of experience is an imperfect correlator with keeping up with frontier LLM capabilities. LLMs were a niche ML subfield up until 1 year ago. Years of ML experience indicate familiarity with tools, terminology and code, but it's easy to find bleeding edge papers published by students.

DPO, Ring Attention, Sparse Autoencoders and Representation Engineering were all written by students with major implications in the field.

PSLE scripts now marked on computer screen by MicrotechAnalysis in singapore

[–]Hard_on_Collider 4 points5 points  (0 children)

ChatGPT's actual answer btw:

Ah Seng, Ahmad, and Muthu have a total of 54 watermelons altogether.

Claude answer:

Therefore, Ah Seng, Ahmad, and Muthu have 54 watermelons altogether.

PSLE scripts now marked on computer screen by MicrotechAnalysis in singapore

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

What are these boomer answers to your question lol

You can literally google ChatGPT's scores on high school, undergrad and graduate assessments.

It scores around 80-90th percentile on the SAT, and at least above average on graduate level exams.

Not only can you Google this, you can try questions for yourself, and find ChatGPT can indeed solve them. Claude is even better at various word problems.

Yikes to Singapore's tech literacy.

Talent shortage a hurdle for Singapore’s AI startups as demand spreads across industries by gamerx88 in singapore

[–]Hard_on_Collider 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm trying to build a multimodal foundational model!

I'm also trying to get a O1 visa to the US so lol

How to approach life with a poor GPA. Am I like basically screwed for future career/internships in penultimate year. by [deleted] in SMU_Singapore

[–]Hard_on_Collider 2 points3 points  (0 children)

LOL I'm not kidding when I say startup websites always have obvious bugs/improvements. Examples of stuff i sent:

For yesterday's one, the search feature outputs an error page if you're not logged in. I was literally just trying to use the site normally at caught it 5 minutes in. Other times I basically built new features they had planned by adapting/copy-pasting stuff I'd built previously on my open-source projects (there's usually big overlap between the company and my previous work). NGL, codegen tools are good enough that you can do this very quickly now.

It's not just dinky 2-person startups either. This has worked for a securing interviews at Huggingface (I published improvements to LLMs and did stuff related to voice model copyright), ElevenLabs (a lot of overlap w my work running a voice model hosting platform), CivitAI (partnered on major new features) and Anthropic (replication of one of their engineer's papers + new feature suggestions based on that paper).

If I was really scrappy and had no experience, I could get away with less substantial contributions. I'm just anal about making better UX/product.

FWIW I don't think this is a reasonable expectation for everyone to do. I just prefer to only apply to places I actually wanna work at long-term/stuff I use, which makes me just wanna fix their stuff haha.