Ask for more injera. It's cheap, they have a lot of it, and they'll probably be happy to provide you with more gratis.
That being said, sure you can just eat it with your hands if it isn't too hot.
Ask for more injera. It's cheap, they have a lot of it, and they'll probably be happy to provide you with more gratis.
That being said, sure you can just eat it with your hands if it isn't too hot.
Not sure I care overly much about the fate of the amoral corporation getting fucked over by the fascist regime. They're both juggernauts, and I would love to see them damage each other.
Remember, the falling out wasn't about the morality of the unsupervised spicy autocomplete killing people, it was about who had the liability when the AI went inevitably wrong. Had the DoD accepted the liability, I'm certain Anthropic would have sold the the stupidest version of skynet imaginable.
https://jmail.world/thread/0f7fac62a94c1d9a989c769d770dbb1a?view=inbox
Smh Tom. You should have known better.
My understanding is that the Gobi Desert has historically been expanding due to desertification of the surrounding grasslands, and the project to plant trees in this area was to halt or reverse this process. In other words, the ecological destruction was already occurring.
But double check me.
AI is something to be genuinely worried about. LLMs are a bubble, yes. They're not great at what they've been shoehorned into, yes. They're a disaster from a security standpoint because of this, yes.
But LLMs are not the totality of deep learning or computer AI, and may not even be the future. We have our artificial inanity bots that do the spicy text auto complete right now, but that's not going to be forever, no matter what Microsoft, Google, and NVidia want you to think for right now.
Artificial intelligence is a problem that has a solution. I cannot tell you how long it will take, but I would be very surprised if I wasn't personally around to see it, which means we need to begin preparing for it now. We need to build systems and structures now that don't carry the inevitable logic that if the riff raff are unnecessary for those in power, then they should be kept docile, ignorant, powerless, and ignored at best, and purged at worst.
I think the point is the Democratic party is excluding themselves, and trying to go through the Democratic party apparatus to counter the Republicans is doomed. The only way to stop them is to sidestep the Dems.
Oh man, I completely didn't think about maintenance. Yeah, a data center will typically have several hard drives swapped per day. You'd have to have life support and a staff up there, as well as frequent resupply trips.
It turns out, that for the values we are talking about here, it actually more or less does! A lemon has a pH of around 2.5, while "Flow" has an advertised pH of 8.1. This means roughly that to neutralize 1L of this water you need approximately 0.4mL of lemon juice or about 8 drops/half a gram. It's hard to tell how much a "spritz" is intended to be, but a single lemon contains about 60mL of juice, so this represents about 0.67% of the total juice inside.
It's a surprising consequence of using a logarithmic scale for pH.
I am a bit late to this party, but I thought I'd piggy back on your comment to halfway address it using math.
We want to run data centers cool. This means keeping the center itself as close to 20°C as possible.
If we lose our convection and conduction then our satellite can only radiate away heat. The formula governing a black body radiator is P = σAT^4. We will neglect radiation received, though this is not actually a negligible amount.
If we set T = 20°C = 294K. Then we have the relationship of P/A = 423.6 W/m^2
According to an article I found on the Register from this April:
According to Google, the larger of the two offered pods will consume roughly 10 megawatts under full load.
This would imply a surface area of at minimum 23600 m^2 or 5.8 acres of radiator.
I don't know how large, physically, such a pod would be. But looking at the satellite view of a google data center in Ohio that I could find, the total footprint area of one of the large building of their data centers is ballpark in that range. I don't know how many "pods" that building contains.
So it's not completely outside of the realm of possibility. It's probably something that can be engineered with some care, despite my earlier misgivings. But putting things in orbit is very expensive, and latency is also a big factor. I can't think of any particular practical advantages to putting this stuff into orbit other than getting them out of the jurisdiction of governments. (Not counting the hype and stock song and dance from simply announcing you're going to set a few billion dollars on fire to put AI into space.)
Is... that a reference to Frankie and Johnny's???
Um... Hello, fellow person who grew up in or around New Orleans in the 1990s. How are things? Where did you wind up after Katrina? I have no idea how to handle someone just randomly referencing commercials I had completely forgotten about.
In English? Seems a little bit sus.