The DeepSeek v3 paper came out this morning, added a few notes about that here https://simonwillison.net/2024/Dec/26/deepseek-v3/
@fencepost @nazokiyoubinbou @jerry I have it turned on as part of powertoys (my excuse is that it was turned on by default)
@jerry I no longer remember if it's part of PowerToys or Windows, but tapping Ctrl to make the pointer 'splash' is very handy.
Do you have a big monitor and often lose your mouse pointer on the screen?
Are you in denial about being old enough to turn on mouse trails?
Well, I have the solution for you!
A desk kitten!
Desk kittens can locate your lost mouse pointer in approximately 3 nanoseconds and feature a clear and reliable indicator that ensures you know EXACTLY where your mouse pointer is.
Get your desk kitten today!
Act now and we’ll throw in the relaxing “purr” mode upgrade, guaranteed to relieve stress while responding to people who are wrong on the internet.
@rox_lukas @mikarv yep, I've also seen this regularly when generating multiple lines of code at once
Hewlett Packard report that they are spotting AI-generated malware in the wild, not through complex analysis or watermarking, but because… it is weirdly well-commented. https://threatresearch.ext.hp.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/HP_Wolf_Security_Threat_Insights_Report_September_2024.pdf
I can't even tell you how much work it takes to create interventions this high quality but also this pragmatic
"We chose to design the intervention ... so that individual instructors beyond the research team could more easily adopt the intervention in their own courses without needing to implement systemic department-wide or interdepartmental curricular changes and so that students could select and engage in the modules most relevant to their learning based on feedback they received"
Shamelessly biased because two of my dearest friends are authors on this AMAZING RESEARCH about opportunity gaps for chemistry-in-biology, but just look at it!! Look at the depth of this lit review! 1800 students across seven course sections! An asynchronous mastery based intervention!
Ok let me explain where I was coming from:
Santa is the god of theft.
Normal Protestant Santa has no motivation as a spirit: why does the entire present thing happen? He just does it!
Santa as the god of theft is a much better myth - all theft in the world is actually committed by Santa year round in the same way that trickster spirits or creatures like elves cause accidents or other categories of misfortune. The North Pole isn't a factory, it's a chop shop where santa and the elves make the stolen goods resellable. Santa then gives a fraction of the laundered products back as gifts in the same way that the Mafia would distribute Christmas turkeys, to keep the balance of benefits level in the neighborhood so we look the other way at how Santa makes his money.
Santa being primarily a counterfeiter explains why Santa can't satisfy arbitrary wishes, but can only provide existing retail products. Santa also then provides a wider allegory about the fundamental structure of property as theft in multiple ways - in that literally the machinery of retail production relies on theft, and also that keeping the wheels turning on capitalism requires the constant churn of artificial destruction and reinjection of waste. Finally santa as god of theft provides a healthier cultural myth about theft, that we are all being stolen from and to not seek to punish individual people, because we will all receive some other gift from the universe to make up for it. Giving gifts is an act of restoring to someone what the world stole from them, making them whole in a way that they don't know what they needed and don't retain attachments to what was lost, but rather embrace what is given. Attributing a gift and especially a handmade gift as being "from Santa" is an acknowledgement that we are not solely responsible for any gift, and offer it as a humble apology from the universe that takes much more from us. Excessive, hyperconsumptive gift culture would be seen as properly excessive, and you'd expect norming idioms like "santa must have robbed their asses hard this year."
So then while currently all Christmas songs are just about santa showing up and giving presents, you would expect to also hear songs about santa being seen doing petty crime the rest of the year. Hence "fuckin santa, he's fuckin stealing my bike"
Online communities are like coral reefs. How are new coral reefs established? A single coral may attach to a rock, or bit of debris, corals can support many other organisms, sponges, small fish, crabs, cluster around, then more corals, more diversity.
The fediverse is anchored around enthusiasm for technology and (formal) education. We can branch out from this point, aggregate, spread. In the long run this is better for the whole community.
Turns out we weren't done for major LLM releases in 2024 after all... Alibaba's Qwen just released QvQ, a "visual reasoning model" - the same chain-of-thought trick as OpenAI's o1 but applied strictly to running a prompt against an image
I've been trying it out and it's a lot of fun to poke around with: https://simonwillison.net/2024/Dec/24/qvq/
@mcc If you open a `run` prompt, you can open the Recycle Bin location in a file explorer by running `shell:RecycleBinFolder`
If you're feeling lonely tonight or on Xmas day, feel free to join my Matrix chat. I'll be monitoring it, and there are almost always a few people to chat with.
Just say hi when you come in and you'll have people to waste your time with. Just as if you were with your family and friends.
I recommend using the Element interface.
Please BOOST for reach.
#chat #christmas #xmas #friendly
Wrote up my notes on ModernBERT, the brand new modern alternative to 2018-era BERT released by https://www.answer.ai/ https://simonwillison.net/2024/Dec/24/modernbert/
code / data wrangler in Switzerland.
Recovering reply guy. Posts random photos once in a while.