It's extremely common to (1) never really look at all your data—there's just too much!—and (2) to start with someone else's pre-trained model—it's too expensive to train from scratch!—with no way to know on what data it was trained.
horror
Genuinely horrified by this thread since to me "unreachable via text" and "very stable" (in both the woman's features and the gore theme) means there's a good chance that there's a lot of unlabeled images in the dataset depicting the abuse of one specific woman.
horror
RT @supercomposite@twitter.com
🧵: I discovered this woman, who I call Loab, in April. The AI reproduced her more easily than most celebrities. Her presence is persistent, and she haunts every image she touches. CW: Take a seat. This is a true horror story, and veers sharply macabre.
🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/supercomposite/status/1567162288087470081
So Springer now wants us to hawk our own publications, and offers us 30% commission on those sales of our work that WE make? Cool.
I guess just doing the research, writing, reviewing, and editing wasn’t enough? 🤷🏻♀️
And maybe you could use Ruby's method call or block syntax to hack parentheses or curly braces into your DSL?
You could probably define a function which within its block argumentt overrides the kernel method_missing, so sentences don't need a set starting word.
An object with a BNF grammar and an evaluation function, which feeds its method_missing to a shift/reduce parser and returns itself, except when the full input is consumed, when it passes the resulting tree to the evaluation function, and returns the result.
If you write a parser as a Ruby object that consumes its method_missing arguments, I guess you could just do full blown NLP or define any context-free grammar as a DSL?
RT @dmitrytsepelev@twitter.com
Check out my experimental gem for creating natural–ish DSLs with Ruby 🙂 Link: https://github.com/DmitryTsepelev/natural_dsl
🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/dmitrytsepelev/status/1554407425482047488
These kind folks proved my Haskell correct!
RT @agdakx@twitter.com
Two new papers for you:
"Practical Generic Programming Over a Universe Of Native Datatypes" w/ Lucas Escot at @icfp_conference@twitter.com
"Reasonable Agda Is Correct Haskell: Writing Verified Haskell using agda2hs" w/ @omelkoni@twitter.com, Lucas Escot, @jmchapman_@twitter.com, and @ulfnorell@twitter.com at #haskell22
P.S. I archived that page on the web archive, and all the grades changed! Which one do I consume now?!
https://web.archive.org/web/20220730234650/https://www.cchit.org/book-on-recommender-system/
Hello, it's me.
RT @Gilesyb@twitter.com
This is an astonishingly important story from @jburnmurdoch@twitter.com. Our suddenly-diminished labour force is an immediate, dangerous drag on UK prosperity. It's a hypothesis, but if NHS decay is the reason, this is THE issue of the decade https://on.ft.com/3IYrtgP
NL: Cop—after revealing the fact that her colleagues call themselves 'exterminators of minorities'—is no longer a cop.
RT @rmnoppe@twitter.com
WTF