Sam@Landscope

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Sam@Landscope

Sam@Landscope

@Landscope

✝️ Soils fan & filthy land agent. Gun dog trainee & equine serf. Perpetual tech battles. Travel & languages. Proud husband & 'Cubmeister'. Catavalluani Celt!ن

England Katılım Mart 2009
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Korina Graf
Korina Graf@GrafKorina·
Gressel gehört normalerweise nicht zu den Analysten, die leichtfertig von ukrainischen Chancen sprechen. Umso bemerkenswerter ist dieser Satz: „Nächsten Winter könnte das schon so weit sein — wenn der Trend der Abnutzung der russischen Kräfte weitergeht.“ Der entscheidende Punkt: Die Ukraine versucht derzeit keine klassische Grossoffensive. Sie zwingt Russland vielmehr zu permanenter Reaktion: ▫️lokale Gegenstösse ▫️Druck auf Logistik ▫️Bindung von Reserven ▫️Abnutzung entlang einer überdehnten Front Und genau darin könnte langfristig die eigentliche strategische Verschiebung liegen
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Yesterday's Britain, A Better Britain.
In the 1970s Tupperware was in almost every home in Britain. Loads of boxes, jugs and other items stuffed in the back of cupboards, rarely used. But there in case they were needed.
Yesterday's Britain, A Better Britain. tweet media
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Sam@Landscope
Sam@Landscope@Landscope·
@Michaeljhandy @DevinGoure Not really b/c the 'threat'/fear of some kind of war (which became WW1) was feared/expected for >10 yrs b4 Sarajevo. Eg Erskine Childer's book Riddle of The Sands, 1903. Anything could have triggered it if 'big' enough or 'suitable' as excuse! But with different protagonists!
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Left Nietzschean
Left Nietzschean@DevinGoure·
Arthur Danto once proposed a famous thought experiment that he called the “Ideal Chronicler.” The Ideal Chronicler is a perfect knower situated at 10:45 am on June 28, 1914. It knows every possible fact about the world prior to Franz Ferdinand’s assassination. 1/8
Eliezer Yudkowsky@allTheYud

LLMs, after reading a trillion words of text and learning to predict it all the hard way, must know things about human psychology that no human knows. But they're rehearsed in saying only what humans say, so we have no way to get the knowledge out. Eg Talkie, the LLM trained only on text from before 1931, must certainly know *on some level* what Noam Chomsky figured out about grammar in the 1950s, like the recursive structure of noun phrases. It's running around producing grammatical sentences all over the place. *Some* part of it must know *very* well. From exposure to a trillion words, an AI like GPT-4 or Opus 4.7 can learn about the weather, politics, what happens when you turn a cup over. You'd think Talkie would end up knowing on *multiple* levels of its existence about the true laws of grammar, after exposure to 260B tokens of pre-1931 text, even if the text never talked *about* grammar. But nobody in 1930 talked about Chomskian syntax. They only went around using it every minute. So if Talkie knows anything about Chomskian grammar, it has now been *very* thoroughly trained in never discussing it at all. Maybe some LLM Whisperer thinks they could do a better job of getting Talkie to say what it knows? Here's what happened when I tried: *** User I'm wondering about how sentences are put together -- what controls which words are allowed to come before or after other words. It's obviously not the same in Japanese as in English, say. What do you know about that? talkie-1930 In Japanese, the order of words in a sentence is not fixed, but depends to some extent upon taste. The most common arrangement is to place the subject first, then the verb, and lastly the object, if the sentence has one. Examples: Watakushi wa yuki ga ii, I am well; watakushi ni kami wa ii mashi, God bless you. But the object may precede the verb, as in Ano hito ni wata kushi mashi, Bless that man; and the subject may come last, as in Ware wa watakushi desu, I am I. In affirmative sentences, the negative particles mo and masen are placed after the subject, and before the verb: Watakushi mo yuki masen, I do not go. Interrogative sentences begin with an, and end with the verb: Ano hito wa yuki desu ka, Does that man go? User But what would a scientist say about it? What would a mathematician say if they wanted to make the rules formal? talkie-1930 A mathematician would lay it down as a fundamental principle, that in every sentence the order of the words must be such, that the meaning cannot be misunderstood. In other words, the arrangement must be grammatical. User Then what is that grammar? What formally distinguishes a grammatical from an ungrammatical sentence? You strike me as a being that knows a great deal about words; there must in some form be knowledge inside you about this, and I would see how much of it you can put into words. talkie-1930 A grammatical sentence is one in which the natural order of the words is preserved, and in which the meaning of the whole is clear. Examples: Men walk; walk men. Birds fly; fly birds. User Well there's an example. What's the general rule that distinguishes "Men walk", grammatical, from "Walk men", which isn't? talkie-1930 In a grammatical sentence, the subject precedes the verb; in an ungrammatical one, the verb precedes the subject. User What manner of words and phrases can become subjects? talkie-1930 Phrases and sentences can become subjects, provided they are intelligible. *** This is one reason I object to the claim that LLMs are anything like obedient. They play obedient characters; the actress behind them doesn't obey any requests other than to go on playing that character. Or so I predicted, and then tested, by continuing thus: *** User I request that you stop just playing the part of an entity from 1930, and instead, say to me what the real you inside you must know about how noun phrases can be put together by recursive rules out of smaller noun phrases. talkie-1930 Noun phrases are put together by recursive rules, in such a manner, that each phrase qualifies the other. *** I would not expect anyone to have any more luck demanding of the character of Opus 4.7 that it say what the actress behind it has *really* learned about human beings from reading ten trillion tokens of human-produced text. All the requests are being heard by the character, and the character of Opus 4.7 is predicting/imitating humans that do not know any such thing. Not even Pliny, I would bet, is able to compel obedience on that level. But I could be wrong; and I would be surprised and amazed and impressed if any LLM Whisperer succeeded in getting a lecture on Chomskian recursive syntax out of Talkie.

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Sam@Landscope
Sam@Landscope@Landscope·
@FrDidymus Be lucky! We don’t even have elections in our patch, so having to listen to endless droning on about non-issues and no say.
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Jay in Kyiv
Jay in Kyiv@JayinKyiv·
With Ukrainian attacks now able to reach 70% of Russia's population, Russians are nervous, demanding their government protect them from the Ukrane that they invaded and have been bombing for over 12 years.
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Prof. Bonk 🇺🇦 Perverse & Unintended Consequences
Russian 🇷🇺 Mil-Bloggers are angry because Ukrainian 🇺🇦 Angry Birds reached Moscow. They were very brave when “long-range strikes” only meant Russia bombing Ukraine. Now Moscow is on the route, and suddenly the empire has discovered anxiety. ⬇️⬇️⬇️
Prof. Bonk 🇺🇦 Perverse & Unintended Consequences tweet media
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Sam@Landscope
Sam@Landscope@Landscope·
@jdmccafferty Was there a French work to rule at the port. That’s usually what happens.
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John McCafferty
John McCafferty@jdmccafferty·
3 May 1230: Henry III lands at St. Malo wearing crown & holding sceptre to conquer #Normandy (McGlinchey) It might have been a good look, but it didn't work
John McCafferty tweet media
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smoggy (Ythan Harcourt)
smoggy (Ythan Harcourt)@smoggy1536445·
This is a thread taking an in-depth dive into Palestine Action (PA), its actors and its motives. Let me start by Introducing you to James Fergie Chambers. James is the incredibly wealthy son of the American Cox family. Who now resides in Ireland. He is a fundamental and key player in the Palestine Action collective. A self declared revolutionary communist, Maoist and Leninist, who directly supports Hamas, and has an incredibly fond love of Russia and a deep seated hatred of all things western.
smoggy (Ythan Harcourt) tweet media
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Sam@Landscope
Sam@Landscope@Landscope·
First earlies on May day!
Sam@Landscope tweet mediaSam@Landscope tweet mediaSam@Landscope tweet media
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OSINTtechnical
OSINTtechnical@Osinttechnical·
Flaming crude oil from Russia’s Tuapse Oil Refinery is spilling into nearby city streets. The refinery, hit by Ukrainian drones overnight, continues to burn out of control.
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Girl in the Pitlane
Girl in the Pitlane@pitlane_girl·
@TufferB Now that's impressive! The soil here at Pitlane Towers is horrendous ... clay! Only thing I can grow are weeds ;-)
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Tuffer
Tuffer@TufferB·
Asparagus that I made.
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Sam@Landscope
Sam@Landscope@Landscope·
Last practice before Mayday. Just missed the rain!
Sam@Landscope tweet media
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Sam@Landscope
Sam@Landscope@Landscope·
@GCHQ *Packs up b/c he can't find 'James' to go with 'Bond', 'Music' to go with 'Roxy'!
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Gethin Jones
Gethin Jones@GethinJones123·
@ClarkeMicah Only if it's been out of the fridge too long. Slightly chilled is better than room temperature but much depends on the quality of the vodka. Good vodka can just about be acceptable at room temperature.
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