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02:58
nice
@Rishav Hello alseep
03:26
\
o
Hey @Andrew
Nice picture :D
user6820627
@zondo so let me try again...
DOES ANYBODY HERE KNOW C++
03:47
Also good morning eveeybody
mrningigng
>http://someonewhocares.org/hosts/
you can speed things up a little by changing 127.0.0.1 to 0.0.0.0
That's what I already have?
Am I supposed to scroll down all the way to copy that?
Pathetic UX.
Ctrl + A, Ctrl + C
Or. If you're on unix. Just Ctrl + A.
And Shift + Inter or mmb
03:55
If he was going to add a plaintext version of that, then why include all those hosts on that main page.
Mah bandwidth
rly?
The entire thing is <100kb.
And I just went to a website that included almost invisible 1.2mb mp4 background video. For no reason.
mah 100kb
an*
Does dota eat data?
facebook's login page ~ 1mb
vivaldi shows you that
not much of it
50 or 60 mb a game maybe
TF2 eats 40-50mb an hour.
volvo is great
04:02
Yeah.
Valve's a great company to work for too.
Apparently there are no rigid team.
oi
I'm back
io!
What happened
All I see is 33 messages
I was looking for somebody who knows C++
But they don't exist.
Because nobody understands the mess that is C++.
@Rishav yeah
nobody wants to work on tf2
04:13
I think 2 people work on TF2 lol
Valve Only Has ~30 Employees Working On Dota 2
And 5 on tf2
one of them is an artist
Well 30'sa lot fo them.
THey're a small shop.
I dont think more than 200 people work at Valve?
And we still get patches. And comics now and then. Updates twice or thrice a year.
@Rishav yeah probably that much.
Hey @ProQ haven't seen you in a while.
04:16
@rishav yeah, I've been pretty busy with school and college apps.
How have you been doin?
I found a cosmetic. yay
My third.
Right now in my programming life, I'm working through Andrew Ng's "Machine Learning" Coursera Course, and trying to create a computer that learns how to play tic-tac-toe.
But tic tac toe
Is like the easiest thing ever.
You can solve it with pen and paper in ~10 minutes.
I can't do that either.
Because I'm dumb.
...
04:20
Or just lazy.
Or both.
Surely you're joking, tic tac toe is always a draw.
I did it when i was in class 8 or smth.
I learnt it when I was in class 8.
@ProQ ITS TOO MATHY
I started it ~3 times never got past week 2.
Haha even with your crazy calc courses? Come on :D
04:22
For me, the math isn't all that difficult, it's figuring out the flippin dimensions of these matrices I'm multiplying together.
Maybe I'm just too lazy.
Following the formulas he gives isn't too hard. It's understanding what they're doing that is :P
Also, I learned from this website first: neuralnetworksanddeeplearning.com/index.html
It totally explains the math that's going on in a much easier way than Ng does. With the two combined I think you'll be able to understand what's going on.
Neat.
But yeah, it's not easy, thus why tic-tac-toe is the game. 9 inputs. Obvious solutions, easy to play against, it's great.
After I do that, I plan on seeing if I can get it to learn the hand game chopsticks.
I tried to make a neural net that could play chopsticks before, and I did it... I just couldn't figure out backprop, so the neural net could only make random moves, and the same "random" move each time.
ooo chopsticks
I suck at that.
I'll probably lose to your random move AI.
04:27
Lol once you play about 40 times you'll know the basic tricks. Again, it should always result in a tie.
I got a really odd result with that program though that I'd like to take more of a look into if I got the chance sometime. (The hard thing is that my code was moderately messy back then, so it takes a little longer to go through and understand what's going on.)
Are you working in Python
Or Octave/Matlab?
The result was that I would have randomized neural nets play against computers that would just make random moves. And the neural nets would consistently beat the random move computer 60% of the time. I ran it over and over again, 1000s of iterations and that's what happened. I don't know why. I thought they'd both be random and so I'd get 50/50 but know.
Lol you think I'd switch over to Octave just for Professor Andrew? Haha no, I've stayed with Python.
Numpy is messier than octave, but at least I know how to make classes and objects in python and it's actually, like, functional; I can get user input and such.
Then maybe your neural nets weren't really random.
What happens when you pit the truly random programs against each other?
That's what I was thinking.
50/50
And random net v random net was also 50/50 I believe
That makes sense.
04:32
I can share the program with you... I think I put it on GitHub?
I don't know any ML sorry.
Haha dude you should totally learn some!
I don't think it's as difficult as you think it is.
Too lazzy
At least make a silly random forward-prop net.'
Also I don't like high level abstractions over stuff.
04:34
Do you know how to do matrix multiplication.
Oh.
Well.
I wouldn't like using an algo without really understanding how it works...
@ProQ Yes, obviously lol.
Maybe you'll be the one to make it not be such a black box learning algorithm? :D
Lol I'm not so smart.
Matrix multiplication. That's all it does to compute answers.
You give it an input, which is a vector. It takes that input, mupliplies it by a matrix to get another vector.
Really
Are we talking about neural nets here?
04:35
Yep
Ah,
What about stuff like regression?
Takes that vector, multiplies it by another matrix, and so on. Every "layer" in a neural net is just a matrix.
then, it spits out a final vector and Ta-daa! Thats your answer.
Oh.
See, that's where I am right now. If I understood it well enough to not confuse myself while explaining it I would :P
So how do you get those intermediate matrices?
04:37
All I've done right now is randomize them XP
That's what the current chopsticks code does.
I set it up with a bunch of random matricies.
xD
Hey @GHat
There's actually two more small parts to forward propagation (computing an answer)
Yeah.
1. After you do your matrix multiplication, you add a different (again for me, random) number to each element in the new vector.
I see.
The hard part seems to be getting those matrices?
:P
Do you essentially randomize them until they give you a correct answer?
04:40
2. You apply the "sigmoid" function to each element in the vector. The function just squashes the values to be -1 to 1.
Then you're done.
There.
Now you know forward propagation. Not too difficult, eh?
You're just about as far as me XD
So yeah, the difficult part is "training" the net.
Getting the computer to figure out how to change the values in the matrix, and the little number you add (called the "bias") in order to computer what you want it to.
So far, I know that you compute how far off the computer is by taking the vector output from the computer and literally subtracting the vecotr you should have gotten.
Its called the "error"
I seeee
Then, you take this error, and you multiply it by the transpose of your matricies, essentially running it backwards through the net.
What problems are neural nets used for?
And then you multiply that by the derivative of the sigmoid function and that's when I get confused XD
04:44
Pretty much everything where computers are learning right now.
You've heard of AlphaGo? Neural Net.
What's different about their neural net?
Not sure if India is this way, but here a lot of the websites share info, so if you look at something on a shopping site, that same item (or related items) can pop up as an ad on a completely different site, so it's used to learn what things you might buy (online product suggestion)\
Oh, and driving cars. All the self driving cars use neural nets to learn.
AND THATS WHY I USE ADBLOCK
Anyways lol.
Good stuff.
Haha yeah XD
Might make my fourth attempt at the Coursera course :3
04:47
Don't. Look at the website I showed you first. It's way more comprehensible.
Then, once you start not understanding that, jump back to the course.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
AlphaGo is different because it's way more powerful and has many many layers and huge matricies, and it also has algorithms to help it pick which games to "train" itself on.
You make it sound like some sort of giant sentient machine.
:P
Well... It kinda is at this point. It's not feeling, but it sure as heck is smart at some things.
The newest one that scares me is this project (let me find the link)
Agh, can't find it.
Anyhow, here's google's neural net company: deepmind.com/research/dqn
Smae one that made AlphaGo
*same
Welp
04:52
Aha! Found it! They're going to teach computers how to control entire armies and deal with supplies and and such. All under the guise of a videogame of course :) businessinsider.com/…
But... It should be open source as of next year, and I'm hoping to be able to help out with the project by that time, so I can understand it.
@Rishav me. ._.
@srifqi I'm sorry
Oh I figure it out now.
Thanks anyways.
I don't think that computers should be taught stuff like this. I think we should be training it on economic problems or things that help people, not war. So I want to be involved so that I can see how things like this are done so that either I can apply it to something else, or so that if computers like this start aiding in actual wars, I have a somewhat okay understanding of what they're doing.
@ProQ The API for controlling SC2 is already open source I think.
04:55
But not the AI stuff behind it I don't think...
There is no AI yet/
I mean the tools already exist for making your own AI.
Time to get started on those matrices xD
Okay. Lol yup! XD
Aha, here's the actual publication, not just a report on it: deepmind.com/blog/…
And here's the good learning site, so it's not so buried in the conversation: neuralnetworksanddeeplearning.com/chap1.html
Wait, neural network is just a bunch of number, right? How could it understand?
Well, I gotta get back to my schoolwork! It was nice to talk with you again @Rishav :)
byeee
05:01
@srifqi What do you mean? Does it know what it's doing? No. It's just computing things that best match the output it wanted. Do you know how your brain works? Nope. It's just computing things that give you the output you want. Same principle :P
I can explain more later, but not today. I gtg. Look it up! See what you can find! Neural nets are super duper duper cool.
05:14
@Rishav you should totally learn OCaml
n i c e m e m e
05:53
Hello, @Vishnu
06:09
@littlepootis Hello...
06:56
YES HELLO!
07:43
hello alseep
 
2 hours later…
09:54
hey @zondo
10:16
watching rick and morty
great stuff
10:57
@Joseph hey!
@Rishav Hello, stranger! I don't know what I'm doing here—just discovered the existence of chat rooms…
Well take a look around :P
I will!
What's the community all about in here?
In here?
You mean this room?
To understand what things are welcome here.. look no further than the the starred posts.
11:02
Everything goes...
This is a really casual place and you can talk about anything.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
you got your arm back
11:55
hai
6 episodes down
frankies
home alone again
chicken 65 and chilli chicken tonight
watch rick and morty
a... comic?
12:22
user6820627
13:09
@Rishav that's a good hat, cool cat
Hi. :")
user6820627
@srifqi hello
14:05
@srifqi take part in the Coci!
Just read contest #3, and then I close the file.
Oh why
I'm doing it it's not that hard.
At least the first 2 problems that I've seen so far :)
14:50
11 hours ago, by little pootis
@Dsafds
Yeah @littlepootis ?
Was telling alseep you're a god at C++.
user6820627
15:06
@littlepootis r u sleepy?
user6820627
i am. it's 22:07 for me.
user6820627
C U again tomorrow!
15:21
@littlepootis ok. Asleep if you want help ask.
Working on x86_64/amd64 for BoneOS!
Hey @Dsafds
Hey @Rishav
How are ya
15:45
Fine thanks , you?
BAD
I AM BADBOIS
What happened?
I am retting royally rekt.
16:01
me too
Came across a party (team) of 8 people who were helping a fundraiser.
For Robbie Rotten.
They were too good.
Not good, but confused the heck out of us. They were all named Robbie Rotten.. and all looked the same.
I just ragequit
16:23
Wow
Anybody wants to take a jab at task 3? 1a06acaf.ngrok.io/tasks_en.pdf
im clueless...
Tunnel 1a06acaf.ngrok.io not found
try again
?
 
2 hours later…
18:28
REE
18:56
@Rishav o/
19:23
\o

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