Alternate account for @simple@lemmy.world
i was hoping for a smaller model, something in the 14B range… My computer won’t run any of these.
Also, a 2TB model. Jesus.
Rather than read PCGamer talk about Anthropic’s article you can just read it directly here. It’s a good read.
My biggest issue with Piefed is how much space the UI uses. Last I checked it didn’t have a “compact mode” like current Lemmy or Alexandrite. Browsing communities is also a bit awkward since it shows you so many topics without a way to sort or remove them.
If this is implemented right it should flag accounts so human reviewers can follow up on it, not take action on its own.
I’ve been using it and people are sleeping on it. It’s easily the best LLM on the market right now, even if you’re not using it for coding. Very good reasoning skills and it doesn’t have the issues other reasoning models do where they overthink or keep saying “but wait” and confusing its outputs.
This is exactly what I wanted. I might make the switch now.
Discord is a terrible format to manage large, complex communities and projects
Terrible how, though? That’s exactly what it gets right. You have easy-to-setup roles and channel accesses, onboarding experiences for people joining a larger server, a huge ecosystem of bots for various purposes, etc.
okay, it is bad for not being indexable, but it’s good at what it does and it’s popular for a reason.
Articles like this are constantly like “if only there was something we can do about it” while omitting the thing people are doing about it because the writer is too lazy to research properly
Yeah I remember voicing this concern when all online communities seemed to be going to discord and people seemed to mainly laugh at me in response at the time.
Because there hasn’t been a single proper alternative until very recently, and even then they’re not as user friendly.
New sci-fi horror enemy just dropped
Bookwyrm does have a feature to fetch book data from OpenLibrary which is detailed enough. The problem last I checked is that the feature doesn’t replace data of already-existing books, so even if it exists in OL it won’t replace the empty listing in Bookwyrm.
If that feature worked properly or the admin of the instance would update to the newest database of OpenLibrary then it should work fine.
Don’t forget OpenAI constantly saying “We had an AI SO POWERFUL that it can be very dangerous!!! And no you can’t see it yet.”
The middle east is very big so you’ll need to be more specific. I live in the ME and it works fine on my end
There’s a big difference, the old privacy policy is written like Mozilla processed that data themselves to suggest sponsors, not that they shared that data with other companies.
The “suggest relevant content” refers to their sponsors like websites that show up on the front page. It’s not evidence that they actually sold that data to other companies.
Read the post and I don’t understand how the author reached the conclusion that this has been happening since 2017. They enabled telemetry by default in 2017, but there’s no proof that data started being sold starting then.
A little early, isn’t it? I heard Cosmic is still relatively unstable since it’s still in beta.
With this, OpenAI is officially starting to crack. They’ve been promising a lot and not delivering, the only reason they would push out GPT4.5 even though it’s worse and more expensive than the competition is because the investors are starting to get mad.
Not really. Other companies forced AI to appeal to investors and look for new ways to trap consumers in subscriptions. Mozilla added free, privacy-friendly addons because people asked for it. Big difference.
That looks perfect, thanks for your work!