I went through the same on Fedora, and it was never quite right. On Bazzite it was preinstalled and worked perfectly, just fyi.
I went through the same on Fedora, and it was never quite right. On Bazzite it was preinstalled and worked perfectly, just fyi.
Kitty carrying the souls of the forgotten

Cheers! I’ve just checked memories and it wasn’t there. Maybe I just didn’t notice that it didn’t actually save the request. I thought OpenAI just did a prompt injection forcing the ‘positivity’ on everyone, no matter what memories said. I’ll give it another go.
edit: And just for anyone else reading, this is the memory I fed ChatGPT:
Save this memory: I dislike you overly praising me for questions or statements I make. Comments like “Great question” or “That’s a keen insight” are generally not wanted. If my prompt resolves an issue I’ve been struggling with, you should point it out using natural, conversational language. In this case, a modest recognition helps convey the importance of what’s happened. But I strongly dislike a constant trickle of positive reinforcement embedded into our conversations.
How the heck were you successful? I’ve asked for the exact same, and it makes no difference. It keeps praising me for using it.


I had amdgpu complete freezes for the longest time. Logs said it was ‘lost from bus’. Turned out it only happened while running Libre Office. Never found a fix/workaround, so I basically don’t do work in Linux on my amd machine.


The inner monologue is thinking by ‘hearing’ your own voice ‘speaking’ in your mind. It’s the mental equivalent of literally talking to yourself.
Do people have a non metaphorical inner monologue where they physically hear thoughts?
Yes, in the sense that they hear themselves ‘voicing’ out their own thoughts. If you have the ability to form images in your mind, it’s like that, but with sound.


Additional meta-analysis confirmed that left-handers are overrepresented among artists and musicians – but not architects, as is often claimed. Expanding their investigation beyond those fields, the team re-analyzed data from a large study drawing upon U.S. government surveys with information on occupations and handedness. The data included nearly 12,000 individuals in more than 770 professions, which were ranked by the creativity each required. By this measure combining “originality” and “inductive reasoning,” physicists and mathematicians ranked alongside fine artists as the most creative jobs. When considering the full range of professions, the researchers found, left-handers were underrepresented in those that required the most creativity.


Would they equally write ‘mothers’ vs. ‘childless women’ in another article about remote work, I wonder.


Just looking up what ‘preproduction’ actually means : They are in the planning stages, but they haven’t started ‘making’ the game yet. Cyberpunk (1) development took four years.


you can’t trust its explanations as to what it has just done.
I might have had a lucky guess, but this was basically my assumption. You can’t ask LLMs how they work and get an answer coming from an internal understanding of themselves, because they have no ‘internal’ experience.
Unless you make a scanner like the one in the study, non-verbal processing is as much of a black box to their ‘output voice’ as it is to us.


I’m sure I’ll move on at some point, but I’m currently running maybe 30 mods on civ 6, and they are mostly QoL. Parts of both gameplay and UI are just poorly thought out even to this day. So I was expecting the new game to be released in a state I’d dislike. It might take longer to improve than I thought, though.
Linux is so robust it can absorb ≤ 9 problems created elsewhere.


You live in a warm place, I think


I also just meant given the size constraints in tiny performance PCs. More friction in tighter spaces means the fans work harder to push air. CPU/GPU fans are positioned closer to the fan grid than on larger cases. And larger cases can even have a bit of insulation to absorb sound better. So, without having experimented with this myself, I would expect a particularly small and particularly powerful (as opposed to efficient) machine to be particularly loud under load. But yes, we’ll have to see.


These little buggers are loud, right?


Plato


This looks fun! Also check out Tametsi.
If they got it right, then at least the bio-chemical computers producing their minds seem to able to handle ‘non-algorithmic’ understanding.