A car, a oven, a wind turbine, a computer, your phone, your table. Dunno, everything can be modeled, I am struggliing to find an object that can not be. — Ander Biguri23 mins ago
@StewieGriffin I loved how GPT-3 learned how to add numbers up to 3 digits by just learning the semantic relationship between them, without the concept of numbers and arithmetic
one could argue that in some sense, it did learn the meaning of numbers though
meta.stackoverflow.com/q/417475/5211833 I'm not quite sure whether I welcome that SO for once actually asks for community input, or whether it looks more to be a case of offloading work to volunteers
@CrisLuengo I always was so bad at that. I never understood why we were supposed to memorize it if we could just compute it. Obviously computing it every time took me a little bit longer, so I always failed when our teacher would make us compete:)
@flawr same here. I memorized a few easy ones, computed the rest from there. Memorizing is pointless (and I’m really bad at it).
@AnderBiguri yes, that is exactly what I’m saying: it memorized the tables, didn’t understand what they mean or where they come from. It knows that “3x3=” is always followed by “9”, just like a kid in school that memorized that 3x3 is 9.
the same as "but people in Africa doesnt have food". Which 1)kinda rude to Africans, to start with 2) are you going to freaking fly this brocoli to ethipia, or what
I remember they really pushed cursive on us in elementary school (while teaching us how to type) and saying how every teacher will expect cursive .. then we got to highschool and it was like "if you don't type this then don't submit it" lol
@ballBreaker That “cursive” thing is only a thing in the US and Canada. In Europe it’s just “handwriting”. That was how we were thought to write, there was no alternative. (At least in Spain and Netherlands, I always assumed it was the same everywhere else too.)
I had an idiot history teacher for many years, who wrote his own “book” on history (not published of course) and would read out loud from it for an hour every class. We had to write down as much as possible from that, and then reproduce as much as possible on the exams. Of course I didn’t do well in his classes. The one thing I learned from him was to write fast, and my handwriting changed a bunch, many letters became separated from their neighbors.
If my handwriting today looks like a doctor’s, it’s not because I have a doctorate, but because of that idiot.
@CrisLuengo I did that to myself during uni. I hate learning from books so I wrote down everything (it's also more common that lecturers don't even recommend books and they just require you to learn what they said and build from that). My handwriting got so compressed it's as good as encrypted.
It's funny because I tend to remark on mid-terms I grade if it's illegible. And I do so using illegible handwriting. But I'm not the one being evaluated so tough luck for them :P