Comment Re:Redirect (Score 1) 43
Oooh. I like this idea.
Oooh. I like this idea.
According to the article, the (Google, Meta, Amazon) have changed the life of a deprecating asset (Google and meta up to 6 years, from 4 and 5.5 respectively) AWS has bounced from 5 to 6 and then back to 5)
The neo-clouds are doing something different and appear to be taking out loans to purchase the gpuâ(TM)s and then using those assets (the gpuâ(TM)s) to back the loan. Kind of like how you or I could take a loan out on a car or mortgage on a house. Neo-cloud loans are for 3 years it appears and they are saying the assets are still good for a total of 6.
So basically Burry is saying he disagrees with both sets of companies over how long those assets will be of value.
But the article points out you have things like A100â(TM)s, released in 2020, which are still heavily utilized in inference workloads (just not training workloads) and were already going 5 years out, so maybe that 5-6 year window is justified)
It also appears to miss the point that the assets are just an input (like seed, fertilizer and water for crops) either the time rented for the gpuâ(TM)s and related infrastructure by cloud customers, or the creation of a trained model, or SaaS offering using the inference platform is the economic output.
Have you ever tried to instruct it to ask you for clarifying questions before providing an answer?
That report was about consumer grade GPUs.
Sure some 5900â(TM)s and 5800â(TM)s might be used in local inference tasks, but ai data centers are stocked with a a completely different set of GPU configurations that nothing in the article alludes to being included (H100â(TM)s or H200â(TM)s) for example.
Itâ(TM)s not the share holderâ(TM)s being sued (the owners) itâ(TM)s the officers. The law is clear in regards to what is required by them, and that if they fail to do that, and are found to have failed to do they, they can be held responsible.
They accept this responsibility and risk for the paychecks that they get.
If they follow the rules, and lose money they are fine.
I donâ(TM)t know all the details on the charges. But limited legal liability does not apply here. I do know that. If they are guilty or not in the eyes of existing laws, thatâ(TM)s for the court to determine.
How do I know, Iâ(TM)ve worked in the banking sector on and off for 20 years, and regularly recieved training about the things that if I fail to do, or in some cases do, that I might be legally liable with fines and up to jail.
As to the Boeing example, if any of those developers were Professional Engineers, they absolutely can be legally liable. Limited liability is a good thing, but does not apply in all cases is not a protect me from negligence, when my role at the company is specifically to not be lawfully negligent.
SVB was a C-Corp not an LLC (and Iâ(TM)m not aware of any U.S. bank that is or can be an llc).
The people being sued had a fiduciary duty to not do what happened, and were, or should have been, quite aware that they can be held Legally Liable if I court finds that they did not uphold the duty.
I think you need to do some more research.
Crap in, crap out. If you are using all of the Internet, you will get crap.
If you constrain the input of the rag model, and the questions asked, it will do a generally, to amazingly, great job.
Upload the original wizard of oz from Gutenberg to a rag system.
Then ask about Dorthyâ(TM)s ruby shoes.
Vs ask that question to a general llm that is not constrained by the actual story
Look up retrieval augmented generation.
Basically you add specific context to your system and it saves it off. That is then used to constrain what is generated.
Obviously if you provide crap context, youâ(TM)ll still get crap out put.
Notebooklm from Google is a good example of this that you can use, without needing to roll your own solution
Or you could always just pay for the service.
From all my training, I’m pretty sure that’s already covered by law. It’s called material information.
If you have that you can’t trade legally.
Great points and clarification. I was talking about a tv stand. The big long flat piece of furniture that goes against a wall either below a hanging tv, or a tv is placed on it.
Dude, this is a setup for kids talking to their grandparents.
Depending on age micing them up is likely a nightmare (both the kids and if anything like my parents the grandparents too)
Soundboard table also sounds like a problem but probably easier to solve. Like putting the omni mic on the tv stand
> Seems Microsoft's CEO should be there to explain why their OS is completely dependent on a 3rd party offering
Because DOJ told them to foster independent software development for windows to allow customer choice. Primarily by avoiding bundling of useful system level things like this.
And those customers chose to use windows servers, and crowdstrike falcon software.
This is what I came to post. In addition to it being the last question, the actual distribution of scores (particularly 4â(TM)s and 5â(TM)s) is pretty good compared to many of the other AP exams. So maybe this exam is working as intended.
Honestly I wouldnâ(TM)t be surprised that the reason for the e-mail is no one thought about it, realized it was an issue (or thought someone else was managing it) and are now scrambling to manage it, and donâ(TM)t have time to add an automated opt out process yet.
"I never let my schooling get in the way of my education." -- Mark Twain