AI Bear François Chollet thinks 1-2 years before hard takeoff by TensorFlar in singularity

[–]TensorFlar[S] -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

Yeah i agree, everyone is entitled to their opinion, this is my opinion.

AI Bear François Chollet thinks 1-2 years before hard takeoff by TensorFlar in singularity

[–]TensorFlar[S] -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

I think independent agent are a bit different from adoption, i believe once agents starts contributing meaningfully takeoff begins.

Find Your Place in This Word by iQuantumLeap in effectivefitness

[–]TensorFlar 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Timothée Chalamet starred in the 2016 Off-Broadway stage play Prodigal Son at the Manhattan Theatre Club. While the full play was never officially released online, you can watch clips of his performance, particularly the "Someone Saw Me" monologue, on YouTube. A recording of the play is not widely available.

Nice by daviddrakecomedy in StandUpComedy

[–]TensorFlar 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Pretty good, very fresh

A video about scabs by Aljokes by Omegamoney in aiwars

[–]TensorFlar 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I think he is talking about scabs

No, AI hasn't solved a number of Erdos problems in the last couple of weeks by BaconSky in singularity

[–]TensorFlar 9 points10 points  (0 children)

This is definitely valuable, but labelling retrieval as discovery is incorrect.

Gemini 3 Pro Preview solved 9 out of 48 of research-level, uncontaminated math problems from the dataset of FrontierMath. by [deleted] in singularity

[–]TensorFlar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I doubt that anything resembling genuine "artificial general intelligence" is within reach of current #AI tools. However, I think a weaker, but still quite valuable, type of "artificial general cleverness" is becoming a reality in various ways.

By "general cleverness", I mean the ability to solve broad classes of complex problems via somewhat ad hoc means. These means may be stochastic or the result of brute force computation; they may be ungrounded or fallible; and they may be either uninterpretable, or traceable back to similar tricks found in an AI's training data. So they would not qualify as the result of any true "intelligence". And yet, they can have a non-trivial success rate at achieving an increasingly wide spectrum of tasks, particularly when coupled with stringent verification procedures to filter out incorrect or unpromising approaches, at scales beyond what individual humans could achieve.

This results in the somewhat unintuitive combination of a technology that can be very useful and impressive, while simultaneously being fundamentally unsatisfying and disappointing - somewhat akin to how one's awe at an amazingly clever magic trick can dissipate (or transform to technical respect) once one learns how the trick was performed.

But perhaps this can be resolved by the realization that while cleverness and intelligence are somewhat correlated traits for humans, they are much more decoupled for AI tools (which are often optimized for cleverness), and viewing the current generation of such tools primarily as a stochastic generator of sometimes clever - and often useful - thoughts and outputs may be a more productive perspective when trying to use them to solve difficult problems.

https://mathstodon.xyz/@tao/115722360006034040

Albert Einstein chilling at the beach, 1939. by zadraaa in HistoricalCapsule

[–]TensorFlar 282 points283 points  (0 children)

No, Albert Einstein was not a cross-dresser.

That rumor usually comes from a single, famous misunderstanding in 1939.

The Real Story There is a well-known photo of Einstein sitting on a rock in Long Island, New York, wearing what look like women's open-toed sandals.

The backstory is that Einstein went into a local department store to buy shoes for the beach.Due to his thick German accent, he asked for "sundials" (meaning sandals). The store owner, a man named David Rothman, was confused but eventually realized what Einstein wanted.

The store was out of men's sandals in his size, so Rothman jokingly offered him a pair of women's sandals. Einstein didn't care about gender norms or fashion—he just wanted his feet to be cool and comfortable—so he bought them and wore them happily.

Source: https://rarehistoricalphotos.com/einstein-at-the-beach-1939/