It falls under the Azure brand.
kogasa
Excel is a brand name, Azure Blob Storage is a descriptive title. It's Azure's blob storage service.
I really don't think it's that bad. The only weird thing is .NET Core becoming just .NET in version 5.
You can't really say any GPT model has nothing to do with OpenAI. They invented the architecture. But the name GPT predates their commercial products using the technology.
Start a project with a good template and learn by tinkering. Some languages/frameworks have some canonical starter templates (.NET, Phoenix/Elixir) and most others you can find by googling "x boilerplate."
Linux gang, but I use Windows at work and do a full update ("Please wait... We're working on things...") weekly over lunch due to being trapped in the Windows insider program. It takes about half an hour. Longer than compiling a kernel though.
I'm more opposed to what he eats
I bet a bot can beat you at Counter Strike too if we made them as strong as possible like chess bots.
I use VSCode + Markdown for an actual notepad. The only thing I ever want from Notepad is to open a file as plain text, instantly, and let me read and search through the text, and maybe make a modification and save it. If I'm gonna be looking at the contents for more than 5 seconds it's already a good idea to be using a proper text editor.
They've already touched it. It has a new UI, new features, and has crashed on me multiple times. They're about to add AI shit to it too.
The top half is his human disguise.
The attention paper from Google introduced transformers, OpenAI introduced generative pretraining as a technique that allows transformers to achieve very good performance on downstream tasks with very little additional fine tuning. This paper and the subsequent release of the pretrained GPT models directly lead to the LLM boom.
https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/openai-assets/research-covers/language-unsupervised/language_understanding_paper.pdf