This guy created a supplement look-up site, called
Pillser, and Google did something so that his hit rate plunged. I've never heard of
Google's YMYL policy before. Google is always trying to mess things up, trying to be the Internet police. But as long as people still view Google as the place to go for searches, that won't end. But this website, as well as
Substance Wiki, are still worth a look. Just be careful about what you do with the information.
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François Chollet recently released the third version of his artificial general intelligence test,
ARC AGI-3, and
all the latest frontier models bombed. We're still not there yet, despite what Jensen Huang says.
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Here's an author who got reamed for using the
em-dash, because it supposedly is a sign that AI was used to generate the text. I use the em-dash a lot. It's easy to insert it with the Mac keyboard, and I like it. It's just ⌘ + -. Easy. But then she goes into other ways to make sure that it's not obvious that your text is AI-generated. I just insert random misspellings, so people know. 😁
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The ladder is missing rungs. I am glad I took up studying AI when I did, because it would be a tough go now. The path from beginner to industry standard (the kind of engineer companies are looking for) is way too wide. But that's not the only gap the author is talking about.
The problem is that “writing code” was never the point. The conversation most people are having right now is about AI writing code. The conversation we should be having is around what software engineering looks like when software engineers don’t have to write code. But behind that is another question, which both sides arguing about code are ignoring: the structural question. If AI handles the work that used to train engineers, where does the next generation of engineers come from?
He's right. How are the next generation of engineers going to know how to push the SOTA to get to the next level? The article is long but it's worth the read. Good points.
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We report three findings that challenge prevailing assumptions about how these systems process and integrate visual information. First, Frontier models readily generate detailed image descriptions and elaborate reasoning traces, including pathology-biased clinical findings, for images never provided; we term this phenomenon mirage reasoning. Second, without any image input, models also attain strikingly high scores across general and medical multimodal benchmarks, bringing into question their utility and design. In the most extreme case, our model achieved the top rank on a standard chest X-ray question-answering benchmark without access to any images. Third, when models were explicitly instructed to guess answers without image access, rather than being implicitly prompted to assume images were present, performance declined markedly. Explicit guessing appears to engage a more conservative response regime, in contrast to the mirage regime in which models behave as though images have been provided. These findings expose fundamental vulnerabilities in how visual-language models reason and are evaluated, pointing to an urgent need for private benchmarks that eliminate textual cues enabling non-visual inference, particularly in medical contexts where miscalibrated AI carries the greatest consequence.
Frontier models are still like misbehaving kids. They make up stuff, and hope you don't find out.
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Screamer is another private voice to text app. Kinda like
Voibe. Your voice never leaves your computer, they say. You can already do that with Apple's dictation and set it so that it doesn't train Siri.
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Ah,
Procomm Plus. I used that app heavily in the good ol' days. BBS software. Those modem connect sounds....
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VPN generator. This seems to be what bit-torrent was to file-sharing. All to help Russians access the Internet without surveillance. Well, good luck with that.
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Flux Capacitor 2026: Applications Open for 1517 Angel Check Program. This is how science and math in the 1700s and 1800s was funded. You identified an aristocratic patron who supported you while you did your academics. Unless you were wealthy yourself. Maybe, this is how the next meaningful genius will be discovered. But I think more burgeoning engineers will have to think this way. It won't just be taking a class, getting a degree and finding a paying job. You must be someone who really understands the math and science has a plan to do something with it.
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Same with Oregon.
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There is an equally big problem at the top of the Tualatin Water system. Scoggins Dam is an earthen dam and is not safe. Period. If we have a major quake and it breaks, thousands of homes will be destroyed, and an untold number of people will die. There are approximately 60 billion gallons of water behind that dam.
Do the folks in Gaston know this?
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