
Are you saying “more” is syllabler than -er?
It has an extra mouth shape, but unless you pronounce it “mowar” it’s still one syllable.

Are you saying “more” is syllabler than -er?
It has an extra mouth shape, but unless you pronounce it “mowar” it’s still one syllable.

I wonder… are Google and Bing search indexes being intentionally left to moulder specifically to drive people to Gemini and ChatGPT?

Funny story there.
I once moved in to a property development where the development collectively paid for water access.
The water was turned on for the developers during construction, but when construction was finished, the city closed the account without remembering to transfer to the strata. So the strata went for almost 10 years without paying beyond the base rate for water, before someone investigated. At that point, the city only back-dated the water use bill to the start of the year, thankfully for the homeowners.
So yeah, it happens, probably pretty regularly.

Seems to me Cox would apply here, wouldn’t it? Or is that just for copyright?
One other hurdle to note specifically in this time: because of the absolute flood of AI bots that tend to hammer popular sites and ignore robots.txt, many web servers out there have moved to a bot allow list — which means if you’ve got a new properly behaved and reporting index bot, you’ll likely find it gets blocked by default on a LOT of the Internet.
Because Google, Bing, Yandex and Baidu already exist.
Any new competition starting up now would need really deep pockets to compete for the decade or so it would take to make any sort of profit.

“You know you’re Generation X when….”
I find it odd that people now reflect fondly back on “old Facebook” when I remember Zuck and his friends going on about how they got hot girls to give them their photos and personal info.
Hopefully the pendulum will swing again; Gen Z doesn’t actually seem very impressed with AI and the digital services economy.

Hybrid Electric Vehicle

That’s all great, but all it takes is to unalign a single parameter and it appears to unalign the entire model.
So this is great for ensuring you’re testing what you think you’re testing, but it’s not going to actually secure a model you’re going to make open.

I’m confused. Aren’t you the one who referred to LLMs In a thread that was conflating LLMs with AI? The parent’s comment seems to be right on point.
It’s kind of like how we’ve lost the war on hacking.
Large language models fall under the current definition of artificial intelligence just as much as Cyc or Cog did in their day, or various expert systems and machine learning models, diffusion models, etc.
Pretty much any non-deterministic inference engine can be classified as an AI, including LLMs.

But which 10 minutes?
One sec, maybe ChatGPT knows….

Cheaper for them, that is.
What I want to see is throttleable models, kind of like progressive JPEG, where the default model is “nano” and it has a watch function that analyzes if more tokens might be needed for a certain task and scales up as needed — identifying if the resources are too much for the device and offloading to the cloud (with explicit permission) only if (but always if) needed. Over time as the technology improves, larger models move to the endpoint.
And then people could have a basic set of sliders: on-device only, on-cloud only, or somewhere in between, based on the user’s preferences.

“There was a long time where the United States government advised other countries on how to protect people within their territory from foreign oppression,” Perloff says. “And it is appalling to realize that now other countries may have to do that about us.”

I use my phone as a media platform; I rarely stream any content on it unless it’s off my Jellyfin server.
I also have a Sony Walkman I got in 1986, but as I don’t have any audiocassettes anymore, it mostly operates as an AM/FM radio (tell me again why our phones don’t have AM/FM when Japan and S Korea do?).
One thing I HAVE been considering is a LoRA Meshtastic setup; plug in a router with an extender board at home, and carry a handheld unit or two with me. That would mean that I’d have a non-cellular connection to my home network within a 25km radius of my home, and mesh networking connection to the Internet in most densely populated areas outside that range, AND the two devices could link any phones or work as walkie talkies in areas where there’s no available WiFi or cellular signal.
To me, that’s a step forward, where a dedicated digital audio player doesn’t really solve any legacy or current problem.
But if you’ve already got one, why not use it? The batteries last a whole lot longer than a smartphone.

I still have an iPad 2 I bought in 2011, and amazingly, the battery still lasts 5+ hours.
It’s got 128GB storage, and that’s used to store a movie or two, 30 hours of music, and a bunch of books and PDFs.
Of course, I’m not going to carry it with me everywhere; that’s what my phone is for. Which also has those things stored on it.

Good luck restricting it for this purpose… but as you’ll see, there isn’t actually a creative commons license that is just “CC” anyway, so that wouldn’t be an issue.

We also have .zip but no .rar, .ace, .gz, .bz, .7z, .xz or even .tar.

Actually, you’re on to something there; have the TLD represent the license agreement to access ANYTHING served over it.
.gpl .lgpl .agpl .mpl .mit .bsd .apache .epl .cddl .cc0 .ccby .ccbysa .ccbynd .ccbync .ccbyncsa .ccbyncnd

I’d pick .
And then people can register whatever TLD they want on top of that.
It’s pushed on coders because it gives every developer a team of never sleeping junior devs for a fraction of the price.
And if the competition is doing it, you won’t compete unless you do it too. Until the price matches that team of junior coders.