The thing I got from reading the majority of these emails is Epstein / trump connection was not that strong later years. I feel JE humored trump to a degree and disliked him to an even larger degree. He may have initially had strong relations in the beginning but he was NOT pleased he was winning the presidency at all. He mentioned multiple times references to dirt on DT and even at one point there was the question did Trump set him up. Not to say JE did no wrong, cause the evidence is 100% there for that but it's super interesting having read the actual files to see the various media spins on all sides. If anything though it's led me to believe there are much stronger ties to Russia with DT than I thought before. (Palm Beach House, the casino, models coming from those areas etc).
A simple explanation would be: orders from the top to integrate an LLM. The people at the top often aren't experts who have worked in the field for years.
The quoted NOAA Administrator, Neil Jacobs, published at least one falsified report during the first Trump administration to save face for Trump after he claimed Hurricane Dorian would hit Alabama.
It's about as stupid as replacing magnetic storage tapes with SSDs or HDDs, or using a commercial messaging app for war communications and adding a journalist to it.
It's about as stupid as using .unwrap() in production software impacting billions, or releasing a buggy and poorly-performing UX overhaul, or deploying a kernel-level antivirus update to every endpoint at once without a rolling release.
But especially, it's about as stupid as putting a language model into a keyboard, or an LLM in place of search results, or an LLM to mediate deals and sales in a storefront, or an LLM in a $700 box that is supported for less than a year.
Sometimes, people make stupid decisions even when they have fancy titles, and we've seen myriad LLMs inserted where they don't belong. Some of these people make intentionally malicious decisions.
I suggest reading up on fixed costs vs variable costs and why it is generally preferable to push costs to fixed.
Assuming you’re not throwing the whole thing out after one forecast, it is probably better to reduce runtime energy usage even if it means using more for one-time training.
Because typically we don’t leap to teach kids things that are speculative.
We in the industry might see AI progressing to where cube vibe coding is just as real as using spreadsheets rather than paper ledger books, but it is years out, and teaching kids on v0.1 tools would just be frustrating for teachers while likely teaching kids all the wrong things.
My kids are absolutely learning how to use AI: every syllabus has guidelines for when AI usage is acceptable (it's not a blanket prohibition against), and they talk about both the pragmatic and ethical implications of it.
A school lesson where the teacher babbles about wishy-washy AI topics needs a lot less preparations by the teacher than a school lesson where he teaches scientifically sophisticated topics.
Because many of them just want to use their phone as a tool, not tinker with it.
Same way many professional airplane mechanics fly commercial rather than building their own plane. Just because your job is in tech doesn’t mean you have to be ultra-haxxor with every single device in your life.
iMessage renders other iMessage users as blue bubbles, SMS/RCS as green bubbles.
People who can’t understand that many people actually prefer iOS use this green/blue thing to explain the otherwise incomprehensible (to them) phenomenon of high iOS market share. “Nobody really likes iOS, they just get bullied at school if they don’t use it”.
It’s just “wake up sheeple” dressed up in fake morality.
It wouldn't be an issue if they didn't pick the worst green on earth. "Which green would you like for the carrier text messages Mr. Jobs?" ... "#00FF00 will be fine."
Which makes tons of sense because iPhone users are higher CLV than Android users. If Google had to choose between major software defects in Android or iOS, they would focus quality on iOS every time.
The president of the US struggles to stay awake in his brief detours from the golf course. It’s a perfect metaphor for the country. All seriousness has left the building.
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