pyriphlegeton
pyriphlegeton t1_j9umvkm wrote
She survived.
pyriphlegeton t1_j95lytv wrote
Reply to comment by GoldenBull1994 in Ukrainian Children Taken By Russia Reunite With Their Families In Kyiv by Strongbow85
Oh, totally! I love it! :D
What are you? Long lost brother? Archnemesis?
pyriphlegeton t1_j93sf9v wrote
pyriphlegeton t1_j6cqopu wrote
Reply to comment by ajahiljaasillalla in Why did 2003 to 2013 feel like more progress than 2013 to 2023? by questionasker577
Fyi, the last "A" in "GABA" already means "acid" so "GABA acid" would be redundant. :)
pyriphlegeton t1_j5y1q32 wrote
Reply to comment by DungeonsAndDradis in Humanity May Reach Singularity Within Just 7 Years, Trend Shows by Shelfrock77
Yeah but that's just not the case. You aren't the world's best surgeon if you can accurately tell me what most sources on the internet say about procedure x on average. That might help speed up education a bit in the best case...and maybe not even that. Google finds you that Information basically as quickly as putting it into something like ChatGPT.
Regardless, that's not even what this AI is about. It's about accurate translation, which again is something completely different.
pyriphlegeton t1_j5y13rn wrote
Reply to comment by Smellz_Of_Elderberry in Humanity May Reach Singularity Within Just 7 Years, Trend Shows by Shelfrock77
It seems to me that one of the biggest challenges is taking real-world data, representing as a model and only then working with it. Such as automated driving, for example. Being perfect at that would give me far more confidence that AI could be disruptive in more areas very soon.
Also AI being capable of reliably fixing and improving other AI at an increasing speed.
pyriphlegeton t1_j5weqjs wrote
I fundamentally disagree that AI being capable of translating at human level is an adequate marker for the singularity.
pyriphlegeton t1_j5i663p wrote
I would've loved to see the actual percentages on the regions, where possible. Interesting map though, thanks.
pyriphlegeton t1_j5i5wv8 wrote
Despite the efforts of Russia to change that.
Starve minorities or foreigners, then export ethnic russians into those territories. There you go, Mother Russia just expanded. Sort of what they're doing in eastern Ukraine - but there they're rather directly killing and kidnapping.
Look up "Holodomor" for a fun read.
pyriphlegeton t1_izix7d6 wrote
Reply to [OC] How to spot misleading charts? I would like to hear your opinion on the subject, also any tips design-wise? by dark_o3
Quite good! In the last example though, I think you should make the big picture a downward trend. So add a few smaller bars to the right of the cherrypicked ones, etc.
pyriphlegeton t1_ixiho90 wrote
Reply to Neuralink Co-Founder Unveils Rival Company That Won't Force Patients To Drill Holes in Their Skull by Economy_Variation365
This product, the "Science Eye" is only intended to cure very specific cases of blindness. The photoreceptors must be ruined but the ganglial cell, the optic nerve and the entire optical tract to the cortex must be intact.
This is basically just a small display inserted into the eye. It won't read any data from the brain, it won't influence hearing, thoughts, movement, smell, etc. This can't enable Ready Player One. It's a cure for some forms of blindness.
Neuralink, if it worked as intended, might enable full dive VR like in Ready Player One. That's not to say it will work as intended. Just that these are very different products.
pyriphlegeton t1_ixigx46 wrote
Reply to Neuralink Co-Founder Unveils Rival Company That Won't Force Patients To Drill Holes in Their Skull by Economy_Variation365
A little comparison of the BCIs that are mentioned in the comments:
This product (Science Eye) intends to cure very specific cases of blindness, nothing more.
Synchron seems to mostly aim for letting people control muscles. It has the benefit of remaining in the vasculature but it couldn't get as close to the cortex as neuralink could, therefore it couldn't read/write from individual neurons, only groups of them. Enough to move large muscles, not enough to hear/see/etc., I'd estimate.
Neuralink wants a direct interface with the cortex. To read/write hearing/vision/movement with very high resolution. However it's much more invasive than both of the former and has a higher potential of surgical complications and scarring.
So assuming they will work as intended:
Science Eye: Cures some cases of blindness, low invasiveness.
Synchron: Cures some cases of paralysis, medium invasiveness.
Neuralink: Cures blindness, paralysis, deafness, enables full-dive VR, transmission of thoughts, etc. Very invasive.
pyriphlegeton t1_ixigogl wrote
Reply to comment by Mr_Hu-Man in Neuralink Co-Founder Unveils Rival Company That Won't Force Patients To Drill Holes in Their Skull by Economy_Variation365
This product (Science Eye) intends to cure very specific cases of blindness, nothing more.
Synchron seems to mostly aim for letting people control muscles. It has the benefit of remaining in the vasculature but it couldn't get as close to the cortex as neuralink could, therefore it couldn't read/write from individual neurons, only groups of them. Enough to move large muscles, not enough to hear/see/etc., I'd estimate.
Neuralink wants a direct interface with the cortex. To read/write hearing/vision/movement with very high resolution. However it's much more invasive than both of the former and has a higher potential of surgical complications and scarring.
So assuming they will work as intended:
Science Eye: Cures some cases of blindness, low invasiveness.
Synchron: Cures some cases of paralysis, medium invasiveness.
Neuralink: Cures blindness, paralysis, deafness, enables full-dive VR, transmission of thoughts, etc. Very invasive.
pyriphlegeton t1_ixif9os wrote
Reply to comment by TheHamsterSandwich in Neuralink Co-Founder Unveils Rival Company That Won't Force Patients To Drill Holes in Their Skull by Economy_Variation365
Well, some malfunctions could kill you.
As far as I'm aware most monkeys survived and those that didn't died of surgical complications, not the device malfunctioning. But feel free to provide evidence to the contrary.
pyriphlegeton t1_ixif1p8 wrote
Reply to comment by MarleyTheDogg in Neuralink Co-Founder Unveils Rival Company That Won't Force Patients To Drill Holes in Their Skull by Economy_Variation365
This is literally only intended to let a specific subset of blind people see again. Nothing else.
pyriphlegeton t1_ixieyg7 wrote
Reply to comment by DaedalusTW in Neuralink Co-Founder Unveils Rival Company That Won't Force Patients To Drill Holes in Their Skull by Economy_Variation365
No, they're building a completely different device for a narrow range of causes for blindness. Cool if it lets some blind people see but that's all it can do.
pyriphlegeton t1_ixiellr wrote
Reply to comment by 2Punx2Furious in Neuralink Co-Founder Unveils Rival Company That Won't Force Patients To Drill Holes in Their Skull by Economy_Variation365
No, put a tiny screen in your eye. Reading articles has gone out of fashion?
pyriphlegeton t1_ixiei2n wrote
Reply to comment by r0cket-b0i in Neuralink Co-Founder Unveils Rival Company That Won't Force Patients To Drill Holes in Their Skull by Economy_Variation365
Against some specific cases of blindness. If your optical nerve or even the ganglial cells in the retina are damaged, this can't do anything.
pyriphlegeton t1_ixiedbu wrote
Reply to comment by AI_Enjoyer87 in Neuralink Co-Founder Unveils Rival Company That Won't Force Patients To Drill Holes in Their Skull by Economy_Variation365
This seems to be a specific solution to cure some specific cases of blindness. Nothing more.
It's awesome if it works but it's not a product with the same intentions as neuralink. Neuralink intends to have a read/write-capability for large parts of the cortex, thereby influencing hearing, vision, speech, movement, etc. This can't do that.
pyriphlegeton t1_ixidkji wrote
Reply to Neuralink Co-Founder Unveils Rival Company That Won't Force Patients To Drill Holes in Their Skull by Economy_Variation365
Well, it seems this rival company will only be able to transmit optical information and only in patients with destroyed photoreceptors but an intact optical nerve.
Neuralink could theoretically stimulate/read any accessible part of the cortex, thereby influencing hearing, vision, movement, speech, etc. That doesn't seem possible with this proposed device.
pyriphlegeton t1_ixicya9 wrote
Reply to Neuralink Co-Founder Unveils Rival Company That Won't Force Patients To Drill Holes in Their Skull by Economy_Variation365
Neuralink wouldn't "force" patients to drill holes in their skull either. They'll offer a treatment which entails it. That isn't force.
pyriphlegeton t1_iw472zg wrote
"[...] 90% of virtual assistants are initially programmed with a binary female gender. This matches the negative stereotype of women as compliant and available to serve."
Well...sure but it also matches the positive stereotype of women being nicer and more likable. Also maybe more trustworthy and reliable.
We can just make up reasons but those are just unfounded allegations.
Personally, I find female voices to sound nicer and more friendly. That would be my reason, as far as I'm aware.
pyriphlegeton t1_ivbi71p wrote
A large part of this is the same reason why people are so disillusioned by fusion power: reading non-scientific articles.
Listen to actual experts in the field, ideally as many as possible. Journalists tend to not have the dahinter idea ejat they're talking about - and they exagerrate on top of that.
Besides that, predicting future progress is inherently difficult and inaccurate.
pyriphlegeton t1_jatcrb6 wrote
Reply to Figure: One robot for every human on the planet. by GodOfThunder101
Looks very much like the TeslaBot.
So far, only a render and a mission statement. I hope they succeed but it's not like they provided anything yet. Everyone agrees that a humanoid robot would be cool, the question is whether one can actually build one.