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Comment Re:No difference between data and instructions (Score 1) 64

The problem of LLMs is that they do not make a difference between data to be processed and instructions how to process the data.

The goal (not yet achieved, obviously) is to build AI that can learn how to interact with humans the way humans do, not to build machines that need carefully-curated data and instructions. We've had those for three quarters of a century now.

Comment Re:..former ASML engineers who reverse-engineered. (Score 1) 118

Sorry, but copying from what others are doing is very normal. Copyrights and patents were originally intended to be quite temporary in duration. And that's as it should be.

I'm all in favor of temporary copyrights and patents, say 5 years. Perhaps 10 if there are a LOT of up front development costs. Beyond that is an aberration, and one shouldn't expect others to abide by it. (And the US basically ignored UK patents and copyrights until quite recently.)

Comment Re:That was fast (Score 1) 118

This is a lab machine, and it's not clear that it's making large chips. I think your 5-10 year prediction of last year is probably right. There will be engineering challenges in converting a lab machine into a production machine.

Actually, my (uninformed) prediction last year, and this year, is that it will take about a decade for China to equal the production of TSMC assuming TSMC keeps improving. But that they'll have "good enough for 90% of the market" within a very few years (and perhaps already do).

Comment Re: so dumb (Score 1) 118

It's not that simple. Every holder of power acts to restrain challengers. If you allow monopolies, then innovation in that area slows drastically. When you have diverse centers of development, then development tends to be faster...but more expensive.

So if you want the most profitable companies, then you allow monopolies. If you want the fastest development, then you break up monopolies, of prevent them from ever arising...but this will make the companies less profitable (on the average).

Historically democracies have been more willing to break up monopolies. Right now, though, the US doesn't seem to be willing to do so. So now rapid development depends on competition between either countries or blocks of countries.

Comment Re: so dumb (Score 1) 118

I don't know what the History Channel said, but Germany was many years away from making the atomic bomb when the Nazi's went on the path of expelling the intellectuals. They had most of the theory, but so did everyone else. They had the people who could have helped convert the theory to practice, but they expelled them. But this was multiple years before theory was converted into practice (i.e. "The Italian navigator has landed in the new world. The natives are friendly.") At at THAT time, the US government didn't really believe in atomic power.

Comment Re:Nope (Score 1) 140

I specified "single threaded", which is true for most of the code I write, even that used by multi-threaded routines. (It means that a lot of the reference parameters need to be const, but that's minor.)

FWIW, I find even C++ to be annoyingly overprotective in the wrong places. It causes me to need to write multiple copies of the same routine that differ (nearly) only in the parameter specs. E.g. when the looser version would be safe anywhere, but can only be used by routines within the class.

Comment Re:Fun fact, again (Score 1) 79

and the millions of shallow people who live through following the life of celebrities.

And, I'm sure, millions more who are cinephiles and really enjoy seeing which of the year's movies, actors, etc., are honored. It's stylish here on /. to be curmudgeonly and cynical about popular culture, but there are lots of film nerds who really like this stuff, and it's fine for them to like what they like.

Personally, I like it enough to check out who won the next day, but not enough to want to watch the show. My wife likes to watch it when there's a film she's particularly enthusiastic about and she doesn't have other things she needs to do. I know others who watch regularly, as well as follow the other major awards.

Comment Re:Should read... (Score 1) 79

Show I don't watch will abandon Broadcast TV for streaming platform I don't use. I think it's safe to say that people over a certain age are never going to be watching the Oscars again because they won't know how to.

I think this decision will have the opposite effect. I don't know who it is that you think doesn't know how to use YouTube, but my 80 year-old parents watch it all the time, whereas broadcast TV like ABC is become less available in the places it was available, and there's a lot of the world that ABC never reached at all. On YouTube, most of the world will have access.

Comment Re:How about no punctuation? (Score 1) 55

The slashdot lameness filter is a road

YOUMESSEDITUPINTHEPA
STLANGUAGESSUCHASLAT
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paved with good intentions but like all

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UNCTUATIONTOOANDOFCO
URSETHEDISTINCTIONBE

such attempts at prescribing rules it can

TWEENCAPITALSANDLOWE
RCASEDIDNTEXISTEITHE
RBUTVELLUMANDSTONEWA

lead to a special place in hell

SEXPENSIVESOITWASWAS
TEFULTONOTFILLTHEWHO
LESURFACEEFFICIENTLY

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