EDIT: Well this is by far my most negative comment here. That’s almost entertaining.
For what it's worth, once you take down votes out of the equation, your comment isn't doing so bad relatively. Fuck the haters, focus on the positive.
EDIT: Well this is by far my most negative comment here. That’s almost entertaining.
For what it's worth, once you take down votes out of the equation, your comment isn't doing so bad relatively. Fuck the haters, focus on the positive.
No argument here, it clearly does. But I don't know of any bootloader games that have a comparable level of features. I suppose with DOS games and demos the amount of native code vs OS libraries would be almost negligible as well.
Sure, but important to put into perspective when you compare it to .kkrieger and other old school demos - the browser does a lot of heavy lifting here.
Having said that, this is a majorly impressive feat. I love it that this is still a thing.
Stopthatgirl7 and inflammatory headlines, name a more iconic duo.
Edit: Reminder to self: do you really want these kinds of posters in your media feed?
I'm aware of that, but we seem to get get distracted from the main point. In the case of OpenAI versus "Her" (i.e. Them launching a similar product, and referencing the film), I think it's the owners of the Her IP that should have a right to complain. Not an actress that was in it, and whose voice is similar to it. According to the article, there were 2 well-known actresses whose vice matched even better. Should they take action as well?
All of this is under the assumption that they didn't actual train on her voice - which does seem likely.
Not anything literally from the script, but I assume that's where the concept of a voice controlled AI assistant came from - whoever holds the rights to that in relation to the title "Her". So if it's based on a novel or story, clearly the writer of that.
Huh? The argument was about open source LLMs being unethical, but your video is about Altman?
By using the same hostnames that you need for wanted content.
I honestly don't care who they play for, as long as it's not at the cost of of any regular scheduled gig.
Regarding electronic voting, you can either have reliable and secure, or anonymous, but not both. Sounds like Estonia went for option 1.
Ai isn't the bubble, that'll keep on improving, although probably not at this rate.
The hype bubble is companies adding AI to their product where it offers very little, if any, added value, which is incredibly tedious.
The latter bubble can burst, and we'll all be better for it. But generative AI isn't going anywhere.