ikarus

54 posts

ikarus

ikarus

@0Ikarus

Katılım Ocak 2022
152 Takip Edilen13 Takipçiler
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ikarus
ikarus@0Ikarus·
I'm wondering if there's a chatbot out there that's trained to teach things like type theory or programming language theory. I mean, wouldn't it be nice to have a teacher to guide you on a particular subject? One whose correctness is solid and unquestionable?
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Fenerbahce vekili
Fenerbahce vekili@Fenerahce2·
@Fenerbahce @amedskofficial Neyse BÜYÜKLÜK bizde kalsın biz yine centilmenligimizi yapalım en azindan bizim duruşumuz yıllardır belli 6saray gibi böyle takımların önderlerini yalayip sampiyon olmuyoruz şerefimizle mücadele ediyoruz
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Adrian Thomas
Adrian Thomas@AdrianThomas90·
Fascinant. L'internationale incel partage massivement la vidéo d'une journaliste méconnue en Belgique francophone (pas française!) d'une chaîne peu regardée car elle coche les fantasmes masculinistes.Camille Terlinden pointe justement l'écart des retraites entre hommes et femmes!
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ᯓ★
ᯓ★@chorio_actis·
if the 'vanlife' influencer always has clean hair and zero piles of sweaty dirty gear lying around they're fake af !!
ᯓ★ tweet mediaᯓ★ tweet mediaᯓ★ tweet mediaᯓ★ tweet media
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Anvi🍒
Anvi🍒@anvixox·
what a spiritual moment when you go out to eat alone at night in another country
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Bradley
Bradley@BradleyLFC24v3·
We've got Referees posting Instagram Dumps what in the Gen Z
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ikarus
ikarus@0Ikarus·
@mike3k25 @FrnkNlsn In engineering mathematics, they teach you to memorise formulas and solve specific types of questions. They only give you a superficial, symbolic familiarity. Don't think it's special.
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mike2025
mike2025@mike3k25·
@FrnkNlsn Hell just give them the basics of any engineering math and watch them unable to finish. Differential Calculus, Integral Calculus, 3D Vector Calculus, Differential Equations, Advanced Linear Algebra, Discrete Mathematics, Number Theory.
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Frank Nielsen
Frank Nielsen@FrnkNlsn·
Nice thin book (about 300 pages) to cruise the math concepts...
Frank Nielsen tweet media
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here’s something
here’s something@ive_arc·
Speed confronts a woman who flipped him off for no reason at dinner 😳
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ikarus
ikarus@0Ikarus·
@maa_bhaishiiH How do you think learning the target language with the help of an intermediate language that could contain grammatical structures found in many logic-based languages like Lojban? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lojban
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Rāma Śēṣan Chandraśēkaran
Rāma Śēṣan Chandraśēkaran@maa_bhaishiiH·
Pimsleur is amazing especially for non European languages. It simply drills the grammatical patterns in your head by mere repetition. But for European languages, I recommend the courses of "Paul Noble" available on Audible. He utilises cognates and common patterns to connect the target language to English and make you get used to the style. For example, in French, when he wants to teach how to say a sentence like "I plan to visit the Louvre in Paris", he first translates that into a French-ified English as "I have the intention of visiting the Louvre museum in Paris" and then literally translates from here to French as "J' ai l' intention de visiter le Louvre à Paris". Similarly, when introducing the word for breakfast, he first says that the word for "breakfast" in French literally means "small lunch" and then gives the French word "petit-déjeuner". Another very good resource is Routledge's colloquial series that is a healthy balance of dialogues and grammar.
@drishtadyumna@drishtadyumn

Been saying it...

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Juggler 🎥
Juggler 🎥@juggler972·
New list. If you have any recs for me which you think fit this tone, pls comment! I love movies like this so much
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ikarus
ikarus@0Ikarus·
@babadookspinoza Hi, is there a resource you can advise to improve our writing? Thank you.
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Phil Hoyeck
Phil Hoyeck@PAHoyeck·
Philosophers will write entire books about the meaning of life and not even mention any of these masterpieces.
Phil Hoyeck tweet mediaPhil Hoyeck tweet mediaPhil Hoyeck tweet mediaPhil Hoyeck tweet media
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Taelin
Taelin@VictorTaelin·
in a post-AGI world, people will simply get used to the fact that computers can solve cognitive problems quickly, and beat us in any cognitive domain, just like we're used to computers multiplying large numbers quickly now, or kicking our asses in chess and go. software and math will lose all their scarcity. "pls create a MMORPG that is like Zelda: Breath of the Wild but with Pokémon instead, let me fly around the world as a Charizard and dive on the water like a Gyarados. give me an executable that I can send to my friends and we'll all be connected to the same world" you press a button and, 3 minutes later, done I doubt that won't work by 2027 "pls create a blockchain exactly like Bitcoin except it uses quantum resistant signatures like Lamport, and you can deploy smart contracts in a Lean-like language, and contracts are only accepted if they're formally verified to be correct w.r.t the following specs..." you press a button and done, you have a hack-proof chain "in three space dimensions and time, given an initial velocity field, there exists a vector velocity and a scalar pressure field, which are both smooth and globally defined, that solve the Navier–Stokes equations" you press a button, and done, you get a solution math is fundamentally easy, and this will break some ppl's worldviews. currently, math seems mystically hard, like chess once was, because we're are animals that struggle with it, only a few of us are capable of adding fractions, let alone working on the edge, so hard problems stand for a long time unsolved, we praise our geniuses. but it isn't once computers are doing it, that won't be a thing anymore. theorem proving will be as trivial as multiplying large numbers. the "uh duh but godel?" folk will still be confused. and computers will come up with incredibly simple, clean Lean proofs for impossibly hard problems. and mathematicians will yell that it is just some trick to satisfy the checker, that it isn't real math if we can't understand it. but then we'll ask the AI and it will kindly reveal the nature of a surprisingly clever mathematical structure that is so alien for our brains to come up with and life will go on automation will increase 100-fold food and goods will be abundant the price of everything will crash other than things that can't be copied like human time and attention which will be on all time high and humans will still play chess and humans will still write software and humans will still do math and we'll dance, play sports and love like we always did for the love of it software and math will lose their scarcity computers will be truly general solvers and we'll get used to it faster than you think and life will go on
Teknium 🪽@Teknium

What are some non obvious but still highly possible post agi scenarios

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ikarus
ikarus@0Ikarus·
@ElijaWinter @VictorTaelin 1- People working less is a concession the capitalist system made in order to sustain itself after socialist revolutions. 2 - The fact that people can produce faster doesn’t mean they can work less.
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Eli Winter
Eli Winter@ElijaWinter·
People work way less than pre-industrial revolution and absolute poverty has plummeted in comparison. Also the industrial revolution helped humans produce far more much faster, AI/robotics however I'll do the same but multiple orders of magnitude more by replacing nearly all humans.
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ikarus
ikarus@0Ikarus·
@giyu_codes Which schools did the top 1% of earners attend? Which schools did their parents attend? Once you know this, you understand how unlikely it is for someone who didn't start life with these privileges to make it into the top 1%. It's not about studying, and it never was.
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giyu_codes
giyu_codes@giyu_codes·
The sad truth. If you want to earn the salary of the top 1% then you need to work harder than those in the top 1% so you can catch up to them. Highly recommend upscaling yourself with a very niche skill or a broad and effective set of skills so you can be undeniably great at what you do. You do not need to have a strong network right now. You do not need to have the best tools that cost $200 a month to start coding. You do not need $1,000 in investments to start your side project. You just need to start somewhere. The tl;dr of how I did it was hopping on Gemini ( ai dot dev) and just keeping my head down in work for 2 years. Work for free, work for pennies, work for proof of skill, and post about it online. Then maybe, if you're lucky, you'll get a nice paying job. I went from $0 a month to $400, then $2000, hit $10k for two months then was let go and back to $3000. Finally I got a job and I am at roughly $250k salary. The grind is worth it if you persevere. I wish I could make it so that you didn't have to suffer for two years like I did though.. if I could find a way to condense all the nuance and information that I learned into 3 months and share it, I would... But there is no other advice than for you to just get started, because someone else out there is already working 10x harder for your future job.
constantin@luckenco

sure, the job market is rough. but you're probably not good enough. over my time on x, I've had the pleasure of following the journeys of multiple mutuals. all of them either landed a job or are really close to doing so. @cachecrab is a cracked Rust engineer. he went from baking the best foccacia in the world to engineering databases @helixdb. @igorjmichalak either got hired already or will be any day. incredibly cracked, working on soulful projects and getting into ML on @tenstorrent hardware (send him a quite box already...). @kais_rad went from working for free to being overbooked in less than a year. he is putting out great designs and is crafting visual stories. @giyu_codes - "the goat" - went from being broke to becoming a cracked ai engineer making multiple six figures with his consulting business. now he's the final boss of creating shareholder value at a huge firm. how does this tie into the job market? all of these guys are cracked at what they do. and more importantly.. they kept going. the harsh truth is: if you don't have a job, you're not good enough (yet). now get to work. get a job, kick in then doors and achieve what you set out to do.

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