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Comment Re:20% as much CO2 (Score 1) 74

One of the most important reasons that many people in European cities don't have cars is that there is great public transport in European cities. For the 20+ years I lived in Hampstead, St Johns Wood, South Hampstead, West Hampstead and Kilburn, I didn't need a car because I had such easy access to multiple tube stations, train stations and buses. Now I live a little further out and while I still have easy access to tube and bus, I do have a car, although we don't use it that often, because there's some journeys that are easier in a car. But I'll happily use tube/train/bus etc. This kind of mixed modal use of transport is super-common in Europe

You have not got a clearly resolved position on this topic.

Comment Re:We are so screwed (Score 4, Insightful) 162

Everybody in society must [...]

Solutions starting with "everybody in society must" have a long and celebrated tradition of going immediately (and often horrifically) pear-shaped, as it inevitably turns out that most of everybody doesn't want to, and therefore won't, and in many cases, can't.

For examples, see the Soviet Union's Communism, China's Great Leap Forward, the Khmer Rouge's agricultural collectivism, North Korea's juche, etc.

Comment Re:glorified chess computer (Score 1) 64

Indeed. And computers beating humans at chess is not a sign of general intelligence either and no serious researcher claims that. The thing is that we find out that some relatively complex problems have other working approaches besides general intelligence. Incidentally, general intelligence alone does not get you far in chess either.

But the other thing we are finding is that while supposedly typical humans have general intelligence, we also know that most people are not actually using it or are not using it much. The ones that do are outliers. "Independent thinkers" make only somewhere around 15% of the population. If a machine can do what the other 85% routinely do, it does not mean that machine has general intelligence. It does mean that machine is pretty useful, but also pretty flawed. And that while it cannot be used for anything requiring real use of general intelligence, it can be used to replace a lot of humans.

Comment Re:A lot of training here - still impressive (Score 1) 64

Its like a souped up search engine;

That is still my conclusion for LLMs in general and I have seen nothing that would strongly indicate otherwise. The real question is whether that is less than or on par with an average person. Keep in mind that only about 15% or all humans can fact-check competently ("independent thinkers") and that is clearly completely out of reach of LLMs. But much of what the rest of humanity can do might not be.

Comment Re:Computers are fast. News at 11. (Score 1) 64

This is probably just a meaningless stunt, like so many done before to keep the hype running. A hard coding problem (but not a research problem) is one where somebody capable, experienced and well-educated takes a few days to think before coming up with a design. Obviously, easy coding problems can either be solved much faster by computers or not solved by them at all. For harder coding problems, the second case applies.

Comment Re:So then how long... (Score 2) 49

So how long before the jokes all comedians tell all sound the same (same theme, same setup, same punchline)?

Comedians will do anything that works to get a laugh, but sourcing jokes from ChatGPT (or similar) is not an effective way to get a laugh. Comedy is based on surprise, and LLMs are based on summarizing old material, so there's a bit of a mismatch there.

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