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It's generally called as pressure release valve. Talk about something adnauseum that it becomes so commonplace that it doesn't evoke strong feelings at all.


"Your thumbs will learn" is a famous Steve Jobs quote from the 2007 iPhone launch.


the whole point of this is that the buttons keep moving so your fingers can't learn. When steve jobs said it, he thought about it first and was talking about something different


Only if the buttons on the iPhone aren't constantly being rearranged by a chatbot. Then they'll never learn.


Sir, this is AI prose. Wendy's doesn't allow AI prose.


Thanks for the heads-up! I actually wrote this based on my own thoughts about the incident, but I understand the concern. I'll make sure to keep my posts in line with the community guidelines.


N-SPHERES

https://youtu.be/BDERfRP2GI0

N-SPHERES ist the most complex Oscilloscope Music work by Jerobeam Fenderson & Hansi3D and took six years to make.

Since it is almost entirely created with parametric functions, it is possible to store only these functions in an executable program and let the program create the audio and video output on the fly. The storage space required for such a program is just a fraction of an audio or video file, so that it's possible to store the executables for the entire audiovisual EP all on one 3.5" 1.44MB floppy disk.The first 500 orders will receive the initial numbered edition with pen-plotted artwork


When I was 10 years old, I asked my maternal grandfather, "why does anything exist at all?"

My grandpa explained it in layman terms which even I could understand. He said, "If nothing should exist because it is simpler state to be in for everything, a sort of Primordial Law. Then what is the mechanism by which this law is enforced. Who or what is ensuring that Law is implemented everywhere for eternity. If we assume that such a mechanism must exist, then we have just proved that something must exist."


That's a really bizarre and oddly Platonist take on things. Your grandfather was viewing laws of nature as rules imposed onto reality by some outside force, and which therefore need some "mechanism" to be in place to "enforce" them.

But I think a more reasonable understanding of natural laws is that they're our attempt to describe the cause-and-effect patterns observable within reality itself. They're not being enforced, they're simply manifest.

Construing "nothing can exist" as a rule that has to be enforced, and not just the absence of any patterns of causality that would produce something that exists, seems to be an error. It actually seems to be a more sophisticated version of reifying the concept of "nothing" such that "nothing exists" would be interpreted as describing the positive existence of an entity called "nothing" rather than merely describing the absence of any such entities within the context.


I don't disagree with you. You might like this video.

A Bubble of Absolute Nothing - Sixty Symbols

https://youtu.be/t8QonEChDGY


This is interesting, it reminds me of the chain of logic from this article:

https://alwaysasking.com/why-does-anything-exist/

> In a reality containing nothing, there are no things as such — at least no material things. But in such a nothing, there is an abstract thing: zero.

> Zero reflects the number of material things to count. But how many abstract things are there to count? There is at least one. The one number that exists to define the number of material things is zero.

> But if we have one number and it is one thing to count, now another number exists: one. We then have zero and one together as the only numbers. But now we have two numbers. Now two exists…

Your grandfather's explanation seems to echo this in terms appropriate for a 10-year-old - there is something inherently unstable about nothingness.


Null set as 0 and then successor method of defining new numbers.

But your way of putting it is like these successor function could be considered as edges of graphs or references or signposts

Imagine a number system with 3 distinct types of Null Sets and they meet at number P after applying successor function for 10, 42, 135 times respectively.


Here's a video lecture of Graham Priest

Graham Priest - "Everything and Nothing" (Robert Curtius Lecture of Excellence)

https://youtu.be/66enDcUQUK0?si=nAZjkauxg75lvuZm


basically: "life, uh, finds a way"


really? when you were 10?


when you sleep under clear skies in the night, these questions are normal.


3blue1brown proves your point.

The saying, "What one fool can do, another can," is a motto from Silvanus P. Thompson's book Calculus Made Easy. It suggests that a task someone without great intelligence can accomplish must be relatively simple, implying that anyone can learn to do it if they put in the effort. The phrase is often used to encourage someone, demystify a complex subject, and downplay the difficulty of a task.


3blue1brown, while they create great content, they do not go as deep into the mathematics, they avoid some of the harder to understand complexities and abstractions. Don't take me wrong, it's not a criticism of their content, it's just a different thing than what you'd study in a mathematics class.

Also, an additional thing is that videos are great are making people think they understand something when they actually don't.


3blue1brown actually shows the usefulness of formalism. The videos are great, but by avoiding formalism, they are at least for me harder to understand than traditional sources. It is true that you need to get over the hump of understanding the formalism first, but that formalism is a very useful tool of thought. Consider algebraic notation with plus and times and so on. That makes things way easier to understand than writing out equations in words (as mathematicians used to do!). It is the same for more advanced formalisms.


this is my horror as well. I don't mind my youtube account to be blocked but what about all the recommendations that I have curated to my liking. It will be huge chunk of lost time to rebuild and insert my preferences into the algorithm. increasingly "our preferences shaped by time and influences and encounters both digital and offline" are as much about us as we are physically.


You could ask GPT for what it knows about you and use it to seed your personal preferences to a new model/app. Not perfect and probably quite lossy, but likely much better than starting from scratch.


I have no YouTube account, and it can figure out my viewing history with just watching a few of my favorite channels usually... including specific videos I watched years ago.

So I wouldn't worry about it.


It's good we are building all this excess capacity which will be used for applications in other fields or research or open up new fields.

I think the dilemma I see with building so much data centers so fast is exactly like whether I should buy latest iPhone now or should wait few years when the specs or form factor improves later on. The thing is we have proven tech with current AI models so waiting for better tech to develop on small scale before scaling up is a bad strategy.


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