On Sat, Feb 24, 2024 at 08:36:35PM +, Just Kant via cctalk wrote:
> Has anyone used it or something contemporaneous?
Not me, at least not yet. I am kind of wet dreaming about it, so maybe
one day.
> Is it at all applicable to any degree to today's approach to
> AI/machine learning tasks? I wo
On Sat, Feb 24, 2024, 9:41 AM Rick Bensene via cctalk
wrote:
>
> Another trick was for drives whose read/write amplifiers (which were
> typically situated within the sealed chamber, thus not replaceable except
> in a clean-room facility) had become flakey, and the drive would start
> getting lots
So, here I was binge watching a scifi series called "Night Sky",
which sadly was not renewed, but I digress...
In one of the episodes two of the characters go to see a man who
apparently is a monitor for something having to do with the devices
that teleport people all over not only earth but
I bought a copy at a mall in Nashville TN some 30+ years ago. I was
working at an airline at the time and was interested in the crew scheduling
problem, as well as all things AI related. I never got too far using
Prolog on that particular problem. I found the disks and manual like 13
years ago a
35 years ago I got tasked to write a simple expert system in Turbo Prolog
because I was familiar with Turbo Pascal. The goal was an application to
assist new members of the help desk. I have vague recollections of having to
define rules to evaluate answers to simple questions. What I remember
It is quite possible to put a touch of watch oil on the shaft of an
older drive (without opening it) to quiet the bearings and re-libricate
the grease. I'm still running RD54's and RD53's without much of an
issue, firing them up every few months seems to keep them happy.
Same for RD51's and RD
So the portions of code belonging to chatgpt which produce the hallucinations
have been isolated?
Which languages were used to build it?
On Sun, Feb 25, 2024 at 3:15 PM Just Kant via cctalk
wrote:
> So the portions of code belonging to chatgpt which produce the hallucinations
> have been isolated?
It's a massive deep neural network, so you can't really isolate
anything. But there are parameters that you can use to tune it, like
Of course I mean Turbo Prolog there, sorry.
On Sun, Feb 25, 2024 at 4:20 PM Gavin Scott wrote:
>
> On Sun, Feb 25, 2024 at 3:15 PM Just Kant via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> > So the portions of code belonging to chatgpt which produce the
> > hallucinations have been isolated?
>
> It's a massive deep ne
On 2/25/24 16:20, Gavin Scott via cctalk wrote:
Turbo Pascal is even still available as its originators took it back
from Borland and made it into Visual Prolog for Windows which has a
free personal edition (the commercial license is only 100 euros too).
Also there's GNU Prolog if you just want
He meant to say Prolog, not Pascal.
Regardless if you want to alleviate all the fuss and mess of running 16 bit
wares on modern h/w, just look for a 32 bit cast off. Many appropriate mobos
can be had on epay for a song.
Now no one I know wants to spend the next 40 years writing 16 bit apps. But
When I was at the VCF SoCal last weekend I met a gentleman who was looking
for someone with Zilog Z180 assembly language experience. He says he needs
someone to rewrite code in what sounds like some kind of terminal server
product he sells(?) to convert the protocol it uses from Televideo format
t
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