Comment Re:Popular Mechanics and The Guardian? (Score 1) 100
all you people cant tell if slaughtering 30,000 of your own people is good or bad?
So... Should we attack every country that slaughters its own people?
all you people cant tell if slaughtering 30,000 of your own people is good or bad?
So... Should we attack every country that slaughters its own people?
If states want to ban ghost guns then make the penalties for doing it so severe that it discourages people doing it. And start improving ways that ghost guns can be forensically matched back to the printers that made them so that if someone was suspected of making parts, that it could be proven in court.
That's ok. I'm sure Google has some competent programmers who could do it.
No one can make session tracking with form variables or URL arguments as reliable as it is with cookies.
Perhaps that's why I'm failing. Struggling with some poorly documented lcd and an esp32. Would probably be more accurate if I were using a pi or something.
I have a lot of success with obscure, mostly-undocumented systems. Which models are you using? There's an enormous difference in capability level between the top-tier models and the next step down. Also a pretty big cost difference.
It's also possible that webXray is confusing ad/tracking cookies with cookies required for normal site operation
There is no such thing. Everything done with cookies can be done some other way EXCEPT for tracking, e.g. with hidden form variables or additional arguments in a request.
It can be, sure, but it's less reliable and more painful to work with.
If the law is about sale or sharing, not collection, then Google doesn't have to change anything, because Google doesn't sell or share data. That would be wasteful; Google's ad business is all about monetizing the data at Google, not giving someone else a chance to monetize it.
Sure, but isn't it interesting that the number of photos -- fuzzy or otherwise -- didn't massively increase when everyone started carrying cameras all the time? In fact it declined significantly.
The only logical conclusion is that the little gray men realized there were a lot more cameras about and became much more careful.
It's possible the companies are flagrantly ignoring the opt out indication.
It's also possible that webXray is confusing ad/tracking cookies with cookies required for normal site operation, viewing any set-cookie command as a violation.
Based on my experience working at Google, I'm betting on the second possibility. But, we'll see. Either we'll hear some stories about the companies being fined, or sued, or prosecuted (depending how the law works), or this will just quietly disappear when someone educates webXray.
I do not want an input only device, and if I want headphones, I'll put one in each ear I want one in. Rarely is that both ears, and usually I consciously and specifically pick which ear I want.
What I do care the most about is a screen. I'm not so hung up on screen size or quality for now, I just want something that I can use easier than my phone. If you don't have a screen, what is the point?
(And yeah, it was a fun degree. Just a BA
DNN-based, like nearly all modern AI. Not Transformers, as far as I'm aware.
Explain how this doesn't count as reasoning. Or this. To name just a couple examples.
Yes, they work by fuzzy logical reasoning. That is literally how neural networks, including the FFNs in Transformers, work. Every neuron is a fuzzy classifier that divides a superposition of questions formed by its input field by a fuzzy hyperplane, "answering" the superposition with an answer ranging from yes to no to anything in-between. Since the answers to each layer form the inputs to the next layer, the effective questions form grow with increasing complexity as network depth grows. Transformers works by combining DNNs with latent states (works on processing concepts, not raw data, with each FFN detecting concepts in their input and encoding resultant concepts into their output) and an attention mechanism (the FFNs of a given layer can choose what information they "want to look at" in the next FFN).
If Meta had instead chosen to make a fantasy RPG where people can make interesting characters and go out into the world and progress, explore etc then it would have had way more success. Or a Battle Royale style game. Or a bunch of well formed leisure pursuits - tennis, chess, sailing, arcade shooters, racing, pinball etc. Or all of the above over time. But they didn't. It was complete intellectual bankruptcy and lack of imagination.
Another megabytes the dust.