Definitely RE for me. I couldn’t sleep after the first time I saw a crimson head. The sharks were terrifying too
Definitely RE for me. I couldn’t sleep after the first time I saw a crimson head. The sharks were terrifying too
10 minutes? bro I’ve sat unattended in the room 40 minutes before
wttr gang
those damn secret lvl100 JRPG bosses
I heard it in a coffee shop just the other day. Several customers and employees complained and the manager skipped the song all in about 30 seconds
My job is castle!
I believe your “They use attention mechanisms to figure out which parts of the text are important” is just a restatement of my “break it into contextual chunks”, no?
Large language models literally do subspace projections on text to break it into contextual chunks, and then memorize the chunks. That’s how they’re defined.
Source: the paper that defined the transformer architecture and formulas for large language models, which has been cited in academic sources 85,000 times alone https://arxiv.org/abs/1706.03762
Yeah I agree. However, Battle Tendency may be hard to jump into it somebody skipped part 1.
People like to bring up the first Jojo parts as an example of skippable content, but I also want to emphasize part 1 & part 2 almost have less episodes (26 combined) than half of part 3 (48 episodes), so it’s hardly skipping anything since there are 6 animated parts.
Why do I need to be polite to a computer? Who is ’?.1$#256’˜’#256$#256’
? And just what is E275 DON’T BYTE OFF MORE THAN YOU CAN CHEW
? All this and more on this episode of In The Program
PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE DO .3 <- !3˜#15’$!3˜#240
Omg that’s so evil I love it
bruh
Yeah but Facebook probably has access to the other person’s contacts where your name and phone number were stored
Piped link for the same video: https://piped.kavin.rocks/watch?v=6XAln91Bs6k
this is literally me
It’s a way to force an 18 year old into a life of indentured servitude under the guise of “financial assistance” by simply clicking accept on a couple online forms, only for 40% of them to end up working jobs that don’t require a college degree in the first place.