Comment Re:patents issued by WHICH government? (Score 1) 28
I rather suspect that it means "valid under the WIPO" treaty.
I rather suspect that it means "valid under the WIPO" treaty.
To be fair, there are lots of negatives about the Chinese approach. And we're so used to the negatives of the US approach that we almost don't see them...but other people do.
As "dominant world power"s go, the US has been quite lenient. This is known as damning with faint praise. OTOH, China shows every sign of being going to be worse...but probably not worse than Britain was.
I won't because I do not give a crap if someone hacks my Slashdot account.
Lets face it, no one is going to use the land around the Three Mile Island power plant for anything besides a nuclear power plant. The reputation is too bad for anything else. Can you see a real estate agent trying to sell it?
"It has a certain glow about it."
But reactivating a plant that never had a problem and installing a server farm on/near it makes a lot of sense.
There is a difference between your Bank account password and your Slashdot password. I am perfectly willing to use 123456 as my slashdot password. I don't, but I am willing to use it. But my bank accounts now use two factor authentication.
Frankly, there are a ton of services that ask for a password for the benefit of the SERVICE, not for you. They want their metadata on you to be clean, rather than caring about your privacy.
If the study did not ask what the passwords were for, then the study proved nothing.
That is true. But they did not make it illegal, just problematic. Anyone under her jurisdiction is likely to get rid of Flock cameras. But they did it in Washington State, this is California. Judges have areas they control.
You could make a similar request for San Francisco. But San Francisco is a much bigger city. As such, they will have to pay a much larger amount to the city for the costs of making such a request.
Cheaper to start a new case and have it disallowed on legal grounds rather than merely making it politically dangerous to allow Flock cameras.
I think your model is only one of several alternatives. I don't foresee a unitary intelligence as likely, but an executive function delegating different tasks to different experts depending on context. And it can't be limited to language, it needs to interact more directly with the physical world. But we're already taking steps in that direction.
Yes, it's difficult. Perhaps it will take awhile. But there's absolutely no reason to expect human intelligence to remain the top measure. (Even now there are lots of contexts where it isn't. Try to out-calculate a spreadsheet. What the spreadsheet can't do is design itself.)
I found GP2.5 to be great at academic-style research and writing; it was absolutely awful at writing code. So; I would tell it to plan some thing for me and write it in a way that could be used by another agent (Claude Code) to build the code to do the thing. In this way, it has been great! I haven't yet attempted it with 3.
That said, I found GP3.0's page to be hilarious:
It demonstrates PhD-level reasoning with top scores on Humanityâ(TM)s Last Exam (37.5% without the usage of any tools) and GPQA Diamond (91.9%). It also sets a new standard for frontier models in mathematics, achieving a new state-of-the-art of 23.4% on MathArena Apex.
It then proceeds to show, lower down on the page, an example of what it can do, by showing off 'Our Family Recipes". If there's anything that touts PhD-level reasoning and writing, it's a recipe book.
Simplified so smart children can understand it:
Nuclear power is just using radiation to heat water (or something else that is later used to heat water), then using the steam to turn a turbine, connected to magnets creating electricity in wires near the magnets. To do this we need a source of radiation that is consistent. To much and it gets so hot it melts everything near it ( 'melt down'). Too little and the radiation is not sufficient to keep going.
Radiation is when you spew out atomic particles - we will be focusing on spewing out neutrons. When they hit things it can heat them up and/or cause other atomic particles to spew out of the thing it hit. A chain reaction is when a material has enough radiation that they spew out enough particles to continue the process indefinitely.
Cold criticality is the point where you have enough radiation to create a chain reaction but the heat being generated is not that much. Not enough to make steam to turn a turbine. No electricity yet, but you are on the right track. Also, this is safe as it won't get hot enough to melt the machinery.
Delayed criticality when the chain reaction is strong enough to make steam to turn a turbine but not enough radiation to worry about. Things are delayed enough for you to control the situation. The neutrons are are going strong, but not fast enough to worry about a melt down.
Prompt criticality is when you get a run away reaction that keeps getting hotter and hotter. This is scary. Because it causes a melt down. This is unlikely to create a nuclear explosion because unless you intended to build a nuclear bomb, something melts and everything fizzles out.
Super criticality is what you build everything well enough to so that it won't melt down. This is called a nuclear explosion. Luckily you have to really work hard to build things this tough.
Good points, but not necessarily eternal truths. I suspect you could use magnetic fields to strengthen the cable. Of course, that would collapse if the power failed. But perhaps there are other alternatives that nobody has thought of.
Still, my favorite skyhook is the PinWheel, though it needs a hefty mass in a fairly low orbit (as well as long arms that reach into the stratosphere). But you need to lower as much mass as you raise (on the average) or the orbit decays.
Looks like you're implementing LISP.
What I wonder is whether it's any good. Admittedly, I don't wonder hard enough to listen to it, but then I generally (almost always) avoid podcasts.
There will be tools. But there will also be the more general intelligence. One can argue about the time-line, and that's quite reasonable, but denying it requires accepting spiritualism or some such.
For that matter, people are often used as tools. It's not an "either/or" choice.
He said "Buy my crypto or no funding."
I THINK THEY SHOULD CONTINUE the policy of not giving a Nobel Prize for paneling. -- Jack Handley, The New Mexican, 1988.