Hi, nice idea. I recently learnt about framer, haven't tried it yet. They have a publishing features. Have you used framer? How would you compare your work with theirs?
I've experimented with it! Framer is a site builder, users build and host complete web pages that exist in their system. This is great for landing pages, but in the words of their own website: 'If you are looking to build a "real app" that creates, updates and lists dynamic data, a simple React application might be a better option for you'[0].
My tool is for designing for "real apps". Designs are exported as components. They can be used in your own codebase as you see fit. For example, a designer for a flight booking website creates a new ticket design. The component is imported and the booking state data is passed to it: <DesignedTicket name={bookingName} departure={departureCode} arrival="LAX" />
As a non academic this is an example in how to express a simple opinion with structure and references. My first reaction was to think this is much ado about nothing, but then I saw it provides a small map one can use to start to navigate this topic.
Yes within a timezone is a good idea. I am based in Australia, teaching myself deep learning, and happy to connect with anyone in Asia. Of course happy to connect with anyone globally, but being in a similar timezone can lead to more serendipity
Snap I am in Australia and working through Andrej Karpathy's videos on neural nets and language models etc.
I am on the fence about having a course-mate as I don’t want to slow down someone else (or vice versa), but might be cool to have a catchup with someone on a similar learning path for inspiration
If the context size is unbounded, how does the time complexity scale with the size of the context, and what are the limiting factors that affect performance as the context size grows larger?
The time and space complexity of inference is constant wrt. context size. You will probably need more parameters to match the performance of a transformer though, so whether it scales better in practice is an open question.
I think he assumes the factory production aspects of how fetal bovine serum is collected taints the karma of lab grown meat.
But that is indeed an entirely sentimental or spiritual concept. FBS doesn't contribute to the suffering of animals because it is a side product that is actually discarded most of the time. At worst, buying FBS means making the main production chain slightly more profitable.
In any case, I don't believe "clean meat" means less animal suffering than "cultured meat". "Clean meat" is just as unscaleable as cultured meat (currently) because of demands on labor and land. You still need to kill an animal long before its natural death, and you raise that animal in the first place to kill it. So I don't follow that particular argument.
We're always actively exploring different prompting - a general question answering prompt most definitely won't work for all searches. Finding what people agree on and disagree about in e.g a reddit thread could be very useful.