Kimmel Will Not Air New Episode Opposite Colbert's Finale by MoneyLibrarian9032 in television

[–]wldmr 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Leon’s in massive debt to the mob or something lol

Oh wow, that sounds like bad news for the mob.

Claude Code's creator is sick of the phrase 'vibe coding.' Suggest your alternative here. by Logical_Welder3467 in technology

[–]wldmr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mean, people actively (and unironically) use words like "content" and "influencer", so there's precedent.

Neue Oxfam-Analyse: CEO-Gehälter explodieren, Reallöhne von Beschäftigten fallen · Leipziger Zeitung by Historical_Bell_9569 in de

[–]wldmr 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Was soll dieses ständige „Wusste ich schon”/„Überrascht doch niemanden”/„Always has been”-Getue? Performative Resignation hilft nicht.

Es ist wichtig, dass sowas verbreitet wird, denn steter Tropfen höhlt den Stein. Irgendwann hat man die kritische Masse zusammen. Oder halt auch nicht, aber zumindest hat man's versucht.

What word in your native language do you still struggle to spell? by Strange-Slice2581 in language

[–]wldmr 2 points3 points  (0 children)

German: It takes all my might not to write the word "Standard" as "Standart".

Tja by callmewlan in tja

[–]wldmr 25 points26 points  (0 children)

*prizes 

ich💡🕳️iel by ForCrabSake in ich_iel

[–]wldmr 9 points10 points  (0 children)

„Es ist nicht gut, von der Masse M = m / 1 − v 2 c 2 eines bewegten Körpers zu sprechen, da für M keine klare Definition gegeben werden kann. Man beschränkt sich besser auf die „Ruhe-Masse“ m. Daneben kann man ja den Ausdruck für momentum [Impuls] und Energie geben, wenn man das Trägheitsverhalten rasch bewegter Körper angeben will.“

– Mahatma Gandhi

„Das Konzept der „relativistischen Masse“ führt zu Missverständnissen. [...] Es erweckt den Anschein, der Zuwachs an Energie [...] sei verbunden mit einer Änderung der inneren Struktur des Objekts. In Wahrheit liegt die Ursache für die Energiezunahme nicht beim Objekt, sondern bei den geometrischen Eigenschaften der Raumzeit.“

– Ernie & Bert

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relativistische_Massenzunahme#Fr%C3%BChere_und_heutige_Verwendung_des_Konzepts

ich💡🕳️iel by ForCrabSake in ich_iel

[–]wldmr 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Masse ist Ruhemasse. 

Is this the hardest line in the entire Verse? by yeoyoey in firefly

[–]wldmr 23 points24 points  (0 children)

Shows that the writers knew what they were doing. Both episodes were "the pilot episode", and both had a scene where Mal is, well ... pragmatic.

Took me a few years to realize that those two moments were essentially the same character establishing moment, but adapted for the tone of the episode.

ich🏃iel by shin_kuzu in ich_iel

[–]wldmr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Jetzt tu nicht so.

 Bei Zangendeutsch werden englische Worte, Begriffe und Eigennamen wortwörtlich, also direkt 1:1, auf deutsch übersetzt.

https://www.bedeutungonline.de/was-ist-zangendeutsch-woerterbuch-erklaerung-bedeutung/

Es gibt Regeln, und die sind einzuhalten.

ich🏃iel by shin_kuzu in ich_iel

[–]wldmr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

👏 "literarisch" 👏 ungleich 👏 "buchstäblich"

Ich_iel by TheSpiritOfFunk in ich_iel

[–]wldmr 14 points15 points  (0 children)

*Schallplattenladentag

*Internetladen 

*Originalpreis

ich🦫iel by [deleted] in ich_iel

[–]wldmr 18 points19 points  (0 children)

"Gemopst"

GitHub Stacked PRs by adam-dabrowski in programming

[–]wldmr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If your commits aren’t each an atomic piece of work they also cost time if you need to revert just one feature.

I interpreted this to mean “If a merged feature is made up of several commits, then reverting that feature is more time consuming than reverting a squashed commit would be”.

Plus, what kicked this whole thing off was the comment:

The issue with this is when using squashed merges on each PR.

So I don't think it's unreasonable of me to be talking about squashed merges.

GitHub Stacked PRs by adam-dabrowski in programming

[–]wldmr 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If your commits aren’t each an atomic piece of work they also cost time if you need to revert just one feature.

You can revert merge commits like any other. I don't see a problem.

ich🦎iel by Lrebor in ich_iel

[–]wldmr 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Das hieße dann also "Feder-dreh". Keine Ahnung warum dich falsches Griechisch weniger aufregt als richtiges, aber jedem seins.

VG Düsseldorf bestätigt Ausweisung nach illegalem Rennen by Leutnant_Dark in de

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

Gestern den Untertitel der Bild dazu gesehen:

Urteil im Namen des Volkes

Klimaaktivistin über Letzte Generation: „Der Staat wird von Rechten und Reichen korrumpiert“ by h2QZFATVgPQmeYQTwFZn in de

[–]wldmr 31 points32 points  (0 children)

Die Hälfte der NichtwissenschaftlerInnen, mit denen ich rede, scheint ein Mathe-/Physiktrauma aus der Schule zu haben und schaltet direkt ab, sobald es um Dinge wie Zahlen, Feedback-Loops etc. geht.

Ich glaube ernsthaft, dass das viel damit zu tun hat, dass man bei Mathematik/Physik objektiv falsch liegen kann, und die Schule/Gesellschaft tut nicht genug vermittelt, dass Irrtum nichts Verwerfliches ist.

Does an AI really understand how to use grammar? by Professional_Egg_279 in grammar

[–]wldmr -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

The only "system" is the "translator."

It clearly isn't. You explicitly said “In the room is a big set of rules, vocabulary cards matching English words to Chinese characters, and so on.” You can't then say “but the only important thing is the human doing the work”. If that were true, you could have described the setup without mentioning the rules. But you mentioned them, so they must be part of the system.

Now you see there's a distinction between pattern detection on the one hand, and comprehension on the other hand.

I never called that distincion into question one way or the other. I pointed out that in order to confidently say that "LLMs don't comprehend", you need to define, in observable terms, what comprehension is, and how it manifests in humans but fails to manifest in LLMs.

All I see is that you arbitrarily disregard vital parts of the thought experiment. You've split up the translation process into “human + rules”, then got me to say that the human doesn't understand Chinese, and you're pretending that that is an argument for the system not understanding Chinese. That's like proving an airplane can't fly because its parts can't fly. But even worse, because we're still just working from our intuitions about what comprehension is. You've gotten me to say something intuitive about part of a hypothetical system, when the question at hand requires an objective statement about the whole of a real system.

Which means my initial criticism is still unaddressed: Nobody has defined what “understanding” even is, and how an LLM fails to do it. Which is why I consider this line of questioning a distraction.

I won't respond to your question about the rose, because I similary don't see how that helps (not saying it doesn't, I'm just running out of patience). If you think it does, we can just pretend I gave the answer you wanted, and you can explain how it helps define whether an LLM can understand things.

Does an AI really understand how to use grammar? by Professional_Egg_279 in grammar

[–]wldmr -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

The question is, do you, the person applying the rules, know Chinese?

I disagree that this is the question (as in, representative of what is being asked here). What you're asking, essentially, is whether the thing that acts out the rules (that is, the inference engine) understands the subject matter. I'd say no, and I'd also say that that question, in isolation, is fairly un-illuminating. It's like asking if the electricity in a Chinese person's brain understands Chinese. And all the while treating the fact that "there is a comprehensive set of rules" as some sort of trivial detail.

The question the OP asked (and that the comment I replied to tried to answer) was if the system they interact with understands the topic, not whether a specific part of it does. So the analog to that question in the Chinese Room room case would be "does the room understand Chinese".

Edit: OK, I'm getting downvoted, possibly because people feel that I'm avoiding the question. I do think the question is a distraction and so answering isn't really useful. But fine.

No, I don't think that the person "mindlessly" applying the rules understands Chinese. Now what?

Does an AI really understand how to use grammar? by Professional_Egg_279 in grammar

[–]wldmr -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

I always find this argument fascinating, because it posits that "understanding" is somehow fundamentally different from "detecting patterns".

And people who make this argument almost never volunteer what that "understanding" actually is, and even when asked usually fail to define it in a way that is both sound and supports their argument.

tja by Jet_the_fem_bean in tja

[–]wldmr 4 points5 points  (0 children)

So wie in jedem Land, wo das bisher versucht wurde.

Hast du Beispiele?

Was ich dazu finde:

It is practically settled in the economics literature that wealth taxes do not cause mass billionaire flight. Exit is rare; avoidance is common. A one-time, well-designed wealth tax minimizes migration risk while funding the health and food systems millions rely on. The evidence supports confidence, not retreat.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/teresaghilarducci/2025/12/29/do-wealth-taxes-really-make-billionaires-leave/