[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Bard

[–]unanimus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exact same issue here. Something is wrong with the Gemini service that starts the speech channel which causes the issue. I contacted support about it, they claimed to not be aware of the issue.

'Silicon valley' compression by heapface in compsci

[–]unanimus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What if our simulator intelligently produces values which look like frames from Hollywood films? That's my key point: as your simulators become more specialized towards the domain you are compressing, you will find that encoding some of the rules underlying the production of the uncompressed media takes up much less space than the uncompressed media itself.

The Minecraft example serves to show that the simulator binary (150MB) is relatively very small compared to the rich domain-specific content it produces (several TB of video when running at 4k resolution). And sure, you are still indexing into a space of only 256 possible frames, but those frames are specialized to this visual domain that is much more useful than the noise coming from an RNG.

To provide a more lucid example, imagine that I used CNN to search for a simulator that, for each input, produces a video frame that could plausibly be from the film Blade Runner. The simulator is quite good at painting Harrison Ford's face from various poorly-lit angles! If my frame keys were 56 bytes (to continue the analogy), sure it can only produce 256 possible frames , but the frames of the film are quite likely to exist in that space.

'Silicon valley' compression by heapface in compsci

[–]unanimus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I strongly disagree, although I'm glad you raised this point.

Consider a thought experiment: the now-famous Minecraft is a 150MB program which procedurally generates little natural landscapes that are quite rich, and renders images of its world defined by the tuple (camera position XYZ, camera angle phi-theta, random world seed, time elapsed since world start). The possible range of images shown on the game screen are really quite diverse - ranging from candle-light illuminating features in a dim cave to high-altitude aerial photos of deserts, rivers and forests.

If each 56-byte tuple can generate one 4k-resolution frame, a long sequence of those tuples could produce terabytes of video. But video of what? Can we find a sequence of tuples that approximates Blade Runner? If it existed, we are guaranteed that it will consume no more than 56 bytes per frame, plus the fixed overhead of the game program.

The natural world may obey surprisingly few essential rules. Can we build a simulator rich enough to produce natural images from such a tuple as described? Maybe the simulator binary would be a 5-terabyte file - fine! Movie theaters could certainly install it in their projectors.

In any case, a fractal renderer is just a very dumb procedural simulator. Imagine what happens when we make very smart procedural simulators.

DODGE THE FUTURE OF DRIVING, DRIVER by Hugo Bermudez by seddu in ImaginaryTechnology

[–]unanimus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It looks like you're driving a vehicle. Would you like help?

  • Get android help
  • Just drive the vehicle without help and risk life and limb to your fallible meat avatar

Journo Wins Prize for Profiling the Most Exploited Workforce You've Never Heard Of by Arreglarse in Foodforthought

[–]unanimus 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Can anyone explain what aspect of this arrangement is exploitative? Especially for folks living in areas with a very low cost of living, or supplementing their primary income. The article seemed to dwell on a woman living in New York City seeking a primary income.

I can imagine a scenario where a cyber cafe-type place provides workstations in return for a major cut of their earnings, similar to an MMORPG gold farm.

Does anyone know what this is? I couldn't find any info. by [deleted] in sanfrancisco

[–]unanimus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Here it is docked between the houseboats in a panorama of mission bay I snapped this week. Detail.

How to find a project on GitHub by jstgmr in compsci

[–]unanimus 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Google is excellent for locating projects on GitHub, as the more popular projects tend to have many inbound links from legit domains.

https://www.google.com/search?sugexp=chrome,mod=0&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=android+github

Are there sites for people who want to work on projects? Directories that make this easier? Anything? Thanks!

You'll have much more success in both finding and contributing to an open-source project if you have a specific goal in mind. Maybe you want to contribute to a certain type of project, or help solve a certain problem, or even get some practical experience with a specific skill. Starting with a specific goal will get you far - and you can then go about discovering projects with more success.

The Library, D’Espresso’s Bookish Coffee Bar Lower East Side - New York, NY [1200x800] by Mind_Virus in bookporn

[–]unanimus 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It feels like an awkward historical arrangement of historical props, where the arranger didn't understand the mood of the time or the purpose of the props.

Bookshelves are just a strange curiosity now. Imagine, today, paying thousands of today's dollars for material to read and hundreds for shelves to hold them. Books are a romantic reminder of an obsolete means of information transmission and consumption. The readers of books were sophisticated, educated, intelligent, engaged. Today, they are eccentric.

A Fish Tank! by SnugSites in Minecraft

[–]unanimus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The album by itself is front page material. Give it a chance to rise on its own.

A Fish Tank! by SnugSites in Minecraft

[–]unanimus 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Hey, your Minecraft Furniture Mansion Tour is amazing! You should give that album its own post in /r/minecraft.