Read the updates in the links too, if you haven't seen the developments elsewhere. AD is involved, one mess after another.
"Language models don't apply to us because this is not a language problem," Nesterenko explained. "If you ask it to actually create a blueprint, it has no training data for that. It has no context for that...." Instead, Quilter built what Nesterenko describes as a "game" where the AI agent makes sequential decisions — place this component here, route this trace there — and receives feedback based on whether the resulting design satisfies electromagnetic, thermal, and manufacturing constraints.... The approach mirrors DeepMind's progression with its Go-playing systems.
This is kind of interesting and cool, and it's not a hallucinating LLM. I've designed a couple of simple circuit boards, and running traces can be sort of zen, but it is tedious and would be maddening as a job, so I can only imagine what the process must be like on complex projects from scratch. Definitely some hype levels coming from the company that give me pause, but it seems like an actual useful task for a machine learning algorithm.
And both are delicious.
Thank you. That looks plausible and should keep the mental wolves at bay, LOL.
Okay, somebody here has to know of have better image searching skills than I do. What is the Visor prop? It's clearly not a spray-painted hair clip like (the inspiration for) Geordi's, but it doesn't look bespoke, more like some sort of removable support rib from... something. Grrr.
I don't seem to hear as much anymore, but for a long time this was me with EVE Online.
I believe the timing works out such that his wife was pregnant during the relationship as well.
I think there's something about the parasitic nature of it, taking over an otherwise healthy ear of corn. We tend to think of our edible fungi as growing out of the dirt like a plant, or a fallen tree, or at worst sort of calmy sitting on top of whatever it is using for its own food. THe fact that this has invaded kernels makes them very bad corn kernels and triggers something instinctive. Corn smut is one of those "the first person to try this was in a bad spot" kind of foods.
Legitimate? Basically none. Illegitimate? First, lazily fixing a fuckup on putting up strings of Christmas lights where you can't daisy chain them properly, with bonus points for the likeliehood of needing to break off the grounding pin. Second, injecting power from a generator into a single circuit of your house if the power is out.
In one sense, you could argue conductors are conductors and if you think through every eventuality you can mitigate risk, but on the other, if you find you're in a situation where one of these seems useful, you are not the type of person thinks through every eventuality.
I would have preferred my Jags come out of the weekend with a two game lead, but I can find some solace in the utterly inglorious failure of this Chiefs season and, hopefully, dynasty.
Harrison Butker in particular can fuck right off.
Unfortunate that Indiana Jones got hurt, but I do love seeing the return of OG Jellybean Jag.
AI does a perfectly fine job summarizing my boring work meetings, but the entire point of those is to be straightforward and unambiguous and in line with previous similar meetings. You cannot trust generative AI to interpret anything with even a modicum of subtlety or novelty. At best it will give you a slop-rack of a framework you can wrestle into something mediocre but basically usable for a specific purpose.
But a twenty-percent efficiency upgrade with a low ceiling on its quality is not what they're all selling. AI is real, it's here to stay, but good god I can't wait for the bubble to pop so LLMs can settle into the limited use cases where they add value.