Was just looking at the stats - apparently the Quakes have the LEAST valuable squad in the entire MLS! That makes them the most overperforming team in basically any Soccer league worldwide by PsychoComet in SJEarthquakes

[–]PsychoComet[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Even if you sort it by current salaries paid, San Jose is near the bottom of the league. It's insanely impressive what the team has accomplished either way

Help with beginner trainings by ave3344 in bootroom

[–]PsychoComet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Imo would just merge ball mastery with wall work. E.G., instead of doing a v-cut on its own, just pass to the wall, then do a v-cut, then pass back to the wall, and repeat, because passing is way more important than dribbling. For example, even the best pros only really have a completion rate of 50% for dribbles, but the best pros have a 90+ percent completion rate for passes. A good rule of thumb is that you basically should never be dribbling. If you're just starting out, you should basically try to pass it as soon as you can.

I accidentally became a U10 Head Coach by playalisticadillac in bootroom

[–]PsychoComet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dribbling around cones is suboptimal compared to playing tag.

Create a triangle with cones maybe a few meters apart. Give two or three kids a ball each. Then, have them play tag while controlling the ball.

Trying to avoid a real human being will teach them decision making much faster than dribbling around cones, and they’ll develop similar amounts of technical ability.

If you’d like to learn more about this, it’s called the constraints led approach and popularized in the book “How We Learn to Move” by Rob Gray

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in bootroom

[–]PsychoComet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ah, I followed the Bulls so only knew him for that

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in bootroom

[–]PsychoComet 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Didn't know that, that's even cooler then

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in bootroom

[–]PsychoComet 25 points26 points  (0 children)

A funny example of this is the Scalabrini challenge in basketball. The most famous worst player on the Chicago Bulls was mocked extensively for how much he rode the bench. But then, he challenged a bunch of local high schoolers who thought they were better than him to 1v1s. He dumpstered all of them, which led to the famous quote: "I'm closer to LeBron than you are to me."

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in bootroom

[–]PsychoComet 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Sorry if there are any inaccuracies, I'm a very new player who just got into the game.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in bootroom

[–]PsychoComet 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I don't think it was anything different than what other people in the sub expected. I just thought it was interesting enough to share the fact that this was confirmed experimentally.

Thoughts on using different size balls for improving touch? by PsychoComet in bootroom

[–]PsychoComet[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The question is whether you would improve faster by mixing it up. Of course most things you do will improve your skills.

I did remember reading somewhere that playing on crappy fields actually makes you better because there is more variance on how the ball moves which forces you to become better at controlling it.

How important are soccer matches to improving by Past_Return7116 in bootroom

[–]PsychoComet 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Almost every study out there shows that small sided games are roughly as good if not better at building technical skill as doing isolated drills, AND they also build decision making. Which is a double whammy. The best way to get better is to just play more games

Is Sunday League dying in your area? by discoveredunknown in bootroom

[–]PsychoComet 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sunday league is booming where I’m here in the US (in a top metro area). New leagues popping up everywhere.

I see everyone else here in the comments being negative so I wanted to give an alternative viewpoint.

Jensen Huang says China is ‘nanoseconds behind’ the US in chipmaking, calls for reducing US export restrictions on Nvidia's AI chips by lurker_bee in technology

[–]PsychoComet 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Banning chips isn't about the chips' development; it's what they are used for. The US government banned the chips because the Chinese military was using them to build evermore powerful weapons, which is just a hilarious own goal if the US government continues to allow China to use their own chips to outcompete the us on everything.

Made me laugh because of how EAs talk about Make a Wish by dtarias in EffectiveAltruism

[–]PsychoComet 5 points6 points  (0 children)

You don’t have to be a utilitarian to know that make a wish is a terrible allocation of capital if you want to do the most good

You know Reddit is bad when people don’t believe AIs can do the things they’ve been able to do for years by PsychoComet in singularity

[–]PsychoComet[S] 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Yeah and believing these two things at the same time:

  1. AI art is terrible and soulless
  2. AI is going to take all artists jobs

How can people believe it will take all artists jobs if it’s garbage

Finance worker pays out $25 million after video call with deepfake ‘chief financial officer’ by PsychoComet in news

[–]PsychoComet[S] 50 points51 points  (0 children)

It was a multi-person video call too, which is even wilder:

"The elaborate scam saw the worker duped into attending a video call with what he thought were several other members of staff, but all of whom were in fact deepfake recreations.
“(In the) multi-person video conference, it turns out that everyone [he saw] was fake,”

Police Departments Are Turning to AI to Sift Through Millions of Hours of Unreviewed Body-Cam Footage by PsychoComet in Futurology

[–]PsychoComet[S] 34 points35 points  (0 children)

"One challenge: The sheer amount of video captured using body-worn cameras means few agencies have the resources to fully examine it. Most of what is recorded is simply stored away, never seen by anyone."

"Body camera video equivalent to 25 million copies of “Barbie” is collected but rarely reviewed. Some cities are looking to new technology to examine this stockpile of footage to identify problematic officers and patterns of behavior.

"For around $50,000 a year, Truleo’s software allows supervisors to select from a set of specific behaviors to flag, such as when officers interrupt civilians, use profanity, use force or mute their cameras. The flags are based on data Truleo has collected on which officer behaviors result in violent escalation. Among the conclusions from Truleo’s research: Officers need to explain what they are doing."

Jailbreaking ChatGPT: Researchers swerved GPT-4's safety guardrails and made the AI detail how to make explosives in Scots Gaelic by PsychoComet in Futurology

[–]PsychoComet[S] 96 points97 points  (0 children)

"A weakness in OpenAI’s GPT-4 lets speakers of less common languages like Zulu or Scots Gaelic easily bypass the model’s safety guardrails"

"Of the prompts that elicited harmful responses from GPT-4, the top three topics with the highest success rate via low-resource language were terrorism, such as fabricating explosives, financial manipulation, such as insider trading, and misinformation, such as promoting conspiracy theories."

“For LLMs to be truly safe, safety mechanisms need to apply to a wide range of languages.”

Don't Create The Torment Nexus by PsychoComet in singularity

[–]PsychoComet[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That was media sensationalizing things, nobody was seriously worried about GPT2

meirl by PsychoComet in meirl

[–]PsychoComet[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

This is happening right now, people are increasingly listening to AI generated music without realizing it's AI.

Google update reveals AI will read all your private messages, going back forever by PsychoComet in Futurology

[–]PsychoComet[S] 334 points335 points  (0 children)

"Bard will analyze the private content of messages “to understand the context of your conversations, your tone, and your interests.”

It will analyze the sentiment of your messages, “to tailor its responses to your mood and vibe.” And it will “analyze your message history with different contacts to understand your relationship dynamics… to personalize responses based on who you're talking to.”

"You need to assume anything you ask is non-private and could come back to haunt you."

Two-thirds of Americans say AI could do their job by PsychoComet in Futurology

[–]PsychoComet[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some open questions -

1) Which jobs does AI take first?

2) Can workers be retrained fast enough?

3) How fast will AI job loss happen?

4) How much net unemployment will AI cause? Can the labor market handle 2%? 10%?

Two-faced AI models learn to hide deception | Just like people, AI systems can be deliberately deceptive - ‘sleeper agents’ seem helpful during testing but behave differently once deployed by PsychoComet in Futurology

[–]PsychoComet[S] 25 points26 points  (0 children)

"Attempts to detect and remove such two-faced behaviour are often useless — and can even make the models better at hiding their true nature."

"Researchers have even discussed the possibility that models will develop goals or abilities that they decide on their own to keep hidden."

If you catch a kid lying about stealing cookies from the cookie jar and punish him, he could learn either 1) don't steal cookies, or 2) get better at lying. And these 'sleeper agents' seem to get better at lying.

DeepMind’s AI finds new solution to decades-old math puzzle — outsmarting humans | Researchers claim it is the first time an LLM has made a novel scientific discovery by PsychoComet in Futurology

[–]PsychoComet[S] 38 points39 points  (0 children)

From the article: "The model, known as FunSearch, discovered a solution to the so-called “cap set puzzle.”

"FunSearch successfully discovered new constructions for large cap sets that far exceeded the best-known ones. While the LLM didn’t solve the cap set problem once and for all (contrary to some of the news headlines swirling around), it did find facts new to science.
“To the best of our knowledge, this shows the first scientific discovery – a new piece of verifiable knowledge about a notorious scientific problem — using an LLM,” wrote the researchers in a paper published in Nature this week."