josh buermann's latest activity
- 2y ·
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Public·
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mastodon.social
{"p":"","h":{"iv":"ROXSYW+cfvEbFHu5","at":"ocxplSQjdRC3tXEtB/9/wg=="}}
An unreliable search engine is as good as it gets, I guess, if it's "a potential absolute limit on the whole practice of language modeling."
https://www.zdnet.com/article/openais-gigantic-gpt-3-hints-at-the-limits-of-language-models-for-ai/
…See more
An unreliable search engine is as good as it gets, I guess, if it's "a potential absolute limit on the whole practice of language modeling."
https://www.zdnet.com/article/openais-gigantic-gpt-3-hints-at-the-limits-of-language-models-for-ai/
See less
An unreliable search engine is as good as it gets, I guess, if it's "a potential absolute limit on the whole practice of language modeling."
https://www.zdnet.com/article/openais-gigantic-gpt-3-hints-at-the-limits-of-language-models-for-ai/
An unreliable search engine is as good as it gets, I guess, if it's "a potential absolute limit on the whole practice of language modeling."
https://www.zdnet.com/article/openais-gigantic-gpt-3-hints-at-the-limits-of-language-models-for-ai/
- 2y ·
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Public·
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mastodon.social
{"p":"","h":{"iv":"ROXSYW+cfvEbFHu5","at":"ocxplSQjdRC3tXEtB/9/wg=="}}
@Gargron @taylorlorenz It doesn't make a whole lot of sense if that is not the assumption...
But the premise that disabled people are "effectively siloed out of view" comes from a retweeted argument about the ramifications of the quote tweet, which wasn't introduced until 2015, a year after BLM and five years after the Arab Spring protests were organized on a chronological Twitter. So that doesn't make any sense either.
…See more
@Gargron @taylorlorenz It doesn't make a whole lot of sense if that is not the assumption...
But the premise that disabled people are "effectively siloed out of view" comes from a retweeted argument about the ramifications of the quote tweet, which wasn't introduced until 2015, a year after BLM and five years after the Arab Spring protests were organized on a chronological Twitter. So that doesn't make any sense either.
See less
@Gargron @taylorlorenz It doesn't make a whole lot of sense if that is not the assumption...
But the premise that disabled people are "effectively siloed out of view" comes from a retweeted argument about the ramifications of the quote tweet, which wasn't introduced until 2015, a year after BLM and five years after the Arab Spring protests were organized on a chronological Twitter. So that doesn't make any sense either.
@Gargron @taylorlorenz It doesn't make a whole lot of sense if that is not the assumption...
But the premise that disabled people are "effectively siloed out of view" comes from a retweeted argument about the ramifications of the quote tweet, which wasn't introduced until 2015, a year after BLM and five years after the Arab Spring protests were organized on a chronological Twitter. So that doesn't make any sense either.
josh buermann updated a note
about 2 years- 2y ·
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Public·
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mastodon.social
{"p":"","h":{"iv":"ROXSYW+cfvEbFHu5","at":"ocxplSQjdRC3tXEtB/9/wg=="}}
@Gargron @taylorlorenz It doesn't make a whole lot of sense if that is not the assumption...
But the premise that disabled people are "effectively siloed out of view" comes from a retweeted argument about the ramifications of the quote tweet, which wasn't introduced until 2015, a year after BLM and five years after the Arab Spring protests were organized on a chronological Twitter. So that doesn't make any sense either.
…See more
@Gargron @taylorlorenz It doesn't make a whole lot of sense if that is not the assumption...
But the premise that disabled people are "effectively siloed out of view" comes from a retweeted argument about the ramifications of the quote tweet, which wasn't introduced until 2015, a year after BLM and five years after the Arab Spring protests were organized on a chronological Twitter. So that doesn't make any sense either.
See less
@Gargron @taylorlorenz It doesn't make a whole lot of sense if that is not the assumption...
But the premise that disabled people are "effectively siloed out of view" comes from a retweeted argument about the ramifications of the quote tweet, which wasn't introduced until 2015, a year after BLM and five years after the Arab Spring protests were organized on a chronological Twitter. So that doesn't make any sense either.
@Gargron @taylorlorenz It doesn't make a whole lot of sense if that is not the assumption...
But the premise that disabled people are "effectively siloed out of view" comes from a retweeted argument about the ramifications of the quote tweet, which wasn't introduced until 2015, a year after BLM and five years after the Arab Spring protests were organized on a chronological Twitter. So that doesn't make any sense either.