Jay F. Cox
203 posts

Jay F. Cox
@JayFCox
Programmer, Ham Radio Operator and a bit of a Weeb. Weeb stuff moved to @JaysTwitforTat for reasons
DFW Присоединился Ocak 2016
481 Подписки71 Подписчики

@withfaheem @paulg Sometimes things need snap decision making, and for that memorization is unavoidable.
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Education was built for a world where information was scarce. That world is literally gone now..So why are we still training kids to memorize things that AI can retrieve instantly??Schools should be focusing on what AI can’t easily replace: judgment, originality, taste, knowing what actually matters, and the ability to think from first principles when everything falls apart
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Jay F. Cox ретвитнул
Jay F. Cox ретвитнул

@domplerhotline @PatSmitty1985 Nah, you really are just being a unimaginative git. We don’t know the full damn context of the photo. We just have a label applied which is likely only vaguely appropriate.
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@PatSmitty1985 Wow everyone in your replies are brainless boot sucking husks. You know who sees more death than cops? Doctors. What would YOU do if your loved one died and the attending doctor was having a healthy chuckle in the same room moments later? But cops can do no wrong these people
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During today’s Falcon 9 launch of @Starlink satellites, the second stage experienced an off-nominal condition during preparation for the deorbit burn. The vehicle then performed as designed to successfully passivate the stage. The first two MVac burns were nominal and safely deployed all 25 @Starlink satellites to their intended orbit.
Teams are reviewing data to determine root cause and corrective actions before returning to flight
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Jay F. Cox ретвитнул
Jay F. Cox ретвитнул

I'm a former defense attorney and currently a civil liberties attorney with no political dog in this fight. I watched the video at least 10 times from different angles and at different speeds and waited to offer an opinion, which I still reserve the right to change if additional information changes the calculus.
It is very clear that the officers instigated the confrontation. The woman initially tried to wave them past her.
ICE officers have no authority to search a US citizen or arrest her (unless there's probable cause to believe she's harboring undocumented individuals, not a contention here). A woman surrounded by masked, armed men who have no law enforcement authority over her has every right to try to escape. Video shows her steering wheel is turned to the right, clearly an attempt to leave WITHOUT hitting anyone and steer clear of the officer standing towards the front of her car. That officer had time to step to the side, which is where he was when he shot her.
Even a real police officer would not have the right to shoot at her for trying to flee. This is well-established in the case law; deadly force may not be used simply to prevent someone from getting away. Given that the ICE officers had no law enforcement authority to begin with, AND the video footage shows she was trying to escape a perceived threat, not to kill anyone, the crime is all the more inexcusable.
I'm praying for the victim's family, especially her children. I'm also praying for all the conservatives who are so unprincipled and lost they're excusing this terrible crime, and gloating over a death that will leave three young children motherless, because of the victim's politics.
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@AStratelates Eh… only one of those is actually based on relational algebra (SQL). It also conveniently abstracts data selection and updates such that the same query/updates can be used no matter what indexes could be invoked. I wouldn’t exactly place it with the other two.
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It's the 1950s. COBOL promises an English-like syntax that will allow non-specialists to program software systems, 10x productivity and not needing to understand the underlying system.
It's the 1970s. SQL promises natural language queries that managers can write themselves, "just tell the database what you want, not how to get it," and "no more dependency on programmers for data access."
It's the 1990s. Visual Programming tools promise "program without coding," "drag and drop your way to enterprise applications," and "development at the speed of thought."
It's the 2000s. MDA promises "design once, deploy anywhere," "business users can modify the models," and "automatically generate perfect code from UML diagrams."
It's the 2010s. No-Code platforms promise "anyone can build an app," "eliminate the middleman between business and technology," and "goodbye IT department!"
It's the 2020s. Vibe Coding promises "just describe what you want in natural language," "no programming knowledge required," and "focus on what your software should do, not how it works."
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@Mathinity_ That’s a bit more complicated looking than the
1 + 1/2 + (more than 1/2) + (more than 1/2) + (more than 1/2) …
that I thought was typically taught. Like, this works in the same way but, like, using 1/2 for grouping is much more intuitive, IMO.
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@YourAnonNews Like, as of *right now*, her popular vote count actually is just above 67 million—very close to 67.1 million. I expect that will go up more.
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@YourAnonNews I seem to remember back in 2016 it took a little while (a few days?) before we realized Hillary did indeed win the popular vote. With California *still* hanging at 54% reporting as of this post, I’m not sure where that leaves us with respect to the popular vote in 2024, though.
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@darpinian @johnloeber I’ve been to numerous sub 4 restaurants and they’ve been great. I rarely heed those reviews. I’ll grant that I tend to go to out of the way locations so there’s a greater chance a score is biased either by the occasional unhelpful review or sad (but since corrected) situations.
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@johnloeber Google Maps reviews are useful, you just have to ignore the 4. Pretend it's a 0-9 scale.
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LLMs generate the answer one token at a time and the second token isn't known as long as the first token wasn't generated. Knowing this is crucial for understanding why LLMs generate nonsensical answers trying to explain unexplainable.
The below screenshot illustrates the problem perfectly. The user asks whether a number prime or not. The LLM generates the first word, which is "No" in this case. That's it. There's no way back. It will continue generating a logical explanation of a wrong answer, which is impossible. The chance of generating a wrong first token is never zero, so the situations like this are inevitable.
And there's nothing to laugh at if you understands how LLMs work.

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@mthmtkr @ProfNoahGian Because muscle memory is a thing, I’d suppose mirroring is only often utilized for (relatively simple) line dances. Anything more complicated is not worth the effort to learning a mirrored version to teach as well as the audience version.
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@mthmtkr @ProfNoahGian “Mirroring” is just a convention for teaching dance. It doesn’t have to be done. In most dance studios there are large mirrors so whoever is leading can do exactly the same as those being taught, while also giving both front and back perspectives, and it’s simpler for everyone.
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