This is what the tech world is turning into. Rene Turcios is a vibe coder, and he's been winning hackathon contests, even though he doesn't know how to code. It's a new world indeed. And someone asks: How Do You Teach Computer Science in the A.I. Era? You must teach the new tools, too, or else your graduates will be behind.
Then you look at Microsoft, laying off a lot of engineers. Is that a wise move? Some would disagree.
This guy think Geoff Hinton shouldn't have been awarded the Nobel Prize. I don't agree. Hinton came up with a lot of insight surrounded neural networks, and autoencoders, which led to Generative Adversarial Networks. But I do agree that the Nobel Committee should consider other pioneers, too, especially the guys that developed transformers – what a difference that made! But the Nobel Prize only guys to three people at most. That could be a problem, although it's just an arbitrary limitation.
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A 17 girl in the Bahamas proved the Mizohata-Takeuchi conjecture. Her name is Hannah Cairo. Now THIS is the diversity I favor. Diversity should be something you celebrate when it happens, but not something that you try to manufacture when it doesn't exist.
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Clarifying tech jargon. A lot of terms are used inaccurately, as their usage has changed the original meanings over time. Here's how to correct that.
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Here's someone who gets it: Portland needs to embrace growth. Nobody is encouraging it. Oregon construction jobs are decreasing.
It’s like expecting your phone to stay charged without plugging it in. You can lower the brightness or close some apps, but eventually, it dies.
That's exactly what's happening.
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