31337

joined 2 years ago
[–] 31337 9 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

They probably just didn't notice, thought it wasn't real, or just kept driving to not endanger themselves.

Open and conceal carry are legal where I live (in Texas, permit not needed anymore), and notice it fairly often. I've lived in bad neighborhoods where I'd hear gunshots about once a week sometimes (guessing gang shit). I've had a bullet come through my bedroom wall while I was sleeping once. I've also lived in rural US, where you'd commonly hear gunshots from hunters or people target practicing. I've known several people who've been shot (some survived, others have not).

I'm guessing it's not very common to see guns in NYC though. I think carrying and gun sales are banned.

[–] 31337 1 points 2 months ago

Shit life syndrome

[–] 31337 1 points 2 months ago

Chevy Bolt and Nissan Leaf come to mind.

[–] 31337 1 points 2 months ago

For houses, most people's barrier is the downpayment. Loans on raw land are more risky, because it's not immediately going to be someone's home (which people will go to extremes not to lose), and there's no guarantee a home will ever be finished there. All things being equal, it's usually cheaper to buy an older home than to build one (to code). I guess an exception would be buying land, having utilities ran, septic tank/well installed, and driveway and pad poured for a trailer, then getting an old trailer and fixing it up (all assuming zoning allows). Even that would be more expensive than buying a plot with an old trailer already on it though. But, I guess you can't use a lot of downpayment/mortgage assistance programs on trailers either.

[–] 31337 16 points 3 months ago

Pipes are often in crawl-spaces or other outer extremities of structures indirectly heated by the warmth coming from the living spaces of the structure, so 55F is a good rule of thumb in some climates.

[–] 31337 1 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Hmm. I just assumed 14B was distilled from 72B, because that's what I thought llama was doing, and that would just make sense. On further research it's not clear if llama did the traditional teacher method or just trained the smaller models on synthetic data generated from a large model. I suppose training smaller models on a larger amount of data generated by larger models is similar though. It does seem like Qwen was also trained on synthetic data, because it sometimes thinks it's Claude, lol.

Thanks for the tip on Medius. Just tried it out, and it does seem better than Qwen 14B.

[–] 31337 -1 points 3 months ago (1 children)
[–] 31337 13 points 3 months ago (2 children)

Is this a real thing? I don't believe I've ever encountered this. I suspect they're actually being demeaning to men in general, or men who don't fit their idea of masculinity. I've encountered people like that. Though the opposite is more common (men, and women, demeaning women who don't fit their idea of what a woman should be like, or just demeaning women in general).

[–] 31337 6 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (3 children)

Larger models train faster (need less compute), for reasons not fully understood. These large models can then be used as teachers to train smaller models more efficiently. I've used Qwen 14B (14 billion parameters, quantized to 6-bit integers), and it's not too much worse than these very large models.

Lately, I've been thinking of LLMs as lossy text/idea compression with content-addressable memory. And 10.5GB is pretty good compression for all the "knowledge" they seem to retain.

[–] 31337 13 points 3 months ago (1 children)

In the U.S., it's from anger at the Democratic party. Mostly anger at, "when they go low, we go high," "reach across the aisle," "we need a strong Republican party," tolerance paradox, and that kind of stuff. Liberal economics isn't really compatible with leftism either.

[–] 31337 5 points 3 months ago

I've seen this term on Mastadon. I'm actually confused by it a bit, since I've always thought replies are to be expected on the Internet.

I think women have a problem with men following them and replying in an overly familiar manner, or mansplaining, or something like that. I'm old, used to forums, and never used Twitter, so I may be missing some sort of etiquette that developed there. I generally don't reply at all on Mastadon because of this, and really, I'm not sure what Mastadon or microblogging is for. Seems to be for developing personal brands, and for creators of content to inform followers of what they created. Seems not to be for discussion. I.e. more like RSS than Reddit (that's my understanding at least).

[–] 31337 1 points 3 months ago

No, just wood.

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