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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 19th, 2023

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  • I have yet to be given an example of something a “general” intelligence would be able to do that an LLM can’t do.

    Presenting…

    Something a general intelligence can do that an LLM can’t do:

    Play chess: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kvTs_nbc8Eg

    Why can’t it play it? Because LLM’s don’t have memory, so they can’t work with logic. They are the same as the little “next word predictor” in your phone’s keyboard. It just says what it thinks is the most probable next word based on previous words, it’s not actually thinking or understanding anything. So instead, we get moves that don’t make sense or are completely invalid.


  • Undertale for sure. (I’m a long time gamer, and I consider this in my top 5 games now)

    It has such a slow start, and meh graphics going into it. It took me 3 separate years trying to get into it, but once I got past the first 2 hours, man did the humour, characters and music blow me away.

    If you’re worried you won’t get into it:

    • The graphics start out rough to make the better graphics later on really stand out
    • The slow start is actually them setting things up a whole bunch of things that pay off later, stick with it. (Also since the game is only 7 hours and there are multiple endings, you will replay it to get the other endings and notice just how much content is hidden at the start that you didn’t understand the first time playing it).

    I’m so glad I came back and stuck with it.

    I was just trying to clear something out of my library and ended up with the most powerful gaming attachment I’ve had in over a decade.





  • first major release under daddy Microsoft, so things may be different

    I wouldn’t hold my breath:

    1. Bethesda’s management have always unvalued spending effort on engine development
    2. Microsoft’s awful mandated top-down rules are what seriously messed up Halo Infinite:
    • To go into this point in more detail:
      • 343 industries hired a large amount of “temporary” contractors to work on Halo Infinite (this is standard in AAA games)
      • For legal reasons, any contractor who had worked on a project for 18 months is given workers protections
      • Microsoft mandated that each contractor be “let go” right before reaching this 18 month time-frame.
      • During the regular process of development, different developers would build different things, then over time either help out with any questions on how to use it, or tweak it to support a new use case.
      • During Microsoft’s mandated development, the developer who built a tool or best knew how it worked was let go. Since it’s easier to write new code rather than read existing code unassisted the developer who needs something done before a deadline has to build a new tool. After 5 years we now have 40 something tools that are all built based on different assumptions that keep overwriting each other’s results in wildly expected way. No one knows how anything works anymore.

  • Single player nostalgia list:

    • FPS:
      • Halo series (Reach, 1, 2, ODST, 3, 4)
    • Strategic:
      • Homeworld
      • Supreme Commander
    • Racing:
      • Trackmania Stadium
    • Roguelike
      • FLT
    • Survival:
      • Minecraft
      • Factorio
    • Tactical:
      • Advance Wars 2
      • Battle for Wesnoth
    • Other:
      • Thumper
      • Space Engine

    Multiplayer nostalgia list:

    • FPS:
      • Halo series (again, 90% of the time the custom game browser already has a game running that I want to join, and it’s still getting updates)
      • PUBG (how is this 6 years old already?)
    • Party games:
      • Golf with Friends
      • Tabletop Simulator
      • Ultimate Chicken Horse




  • I wonder if they’re lying about this. Maybe the fans are super loud or something and they didn’t want the reporter to know.

    That’s far too conspiratorial for me. Loud fans in an engineering sample aren’t a reason to break a fan.

    A fast fan blade on a laptop would snap easily if it was handled, which is exactly what would be happening on both a laptop where assembling and disassembling it is a feature and a laptop being actively tested.

    If it was a blade that broke, that wouldn’t stop the fan from working, so it was probably the servo, power, or bearings which is exactly what you’d expect to find broken in an engineering sample. Why? Because engineering samples almost always have issues in them. That’s the whole point of the samples, to find out what the issues are so they can be fixed before mass manufacture.