2 comments

  • jauntywundrkind32 minutes ago
    If you haven&#x27;t read Waldrop&#x27;s <i>The Dream Machine: J.C.R. Licklider and the Revolution That Made Computing Personal</i> (2002), run don&#x27;t walk to your nearest bookstore or library &amp; get a copy. Amazing tale of an incredible creation of computing and connection.<p>It&#x27;s so fantastic, such a surprise to see this age now where it no longer takes decades of training to become able to really enter a symbiosis with computers. There&#x27;s plenty of things not great about LLMs and their behaviors, but there&#x27;s also so much one can learn with curiosity and their native written language now, that used to all require so much more esoteric knowledge to begin to understand. It&#x27;s incredible. <i>&quot;The Language Problem&quot;</i> is radically diminished:<p>&gt; <i>The basic dissimilarity between human languages and computer languages may be the most serious obstacle to true symbiosis.</i><p>I loved this quote from Jesse Kriss, as described by Chris Ashworth as he talked about writing some new theater software with LLMs, <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tiktok.com&#x2F;@chris_ashworth&#x2F;video&#x2F;7600801037292768525" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tiktok.com&#x2F;@chris_ashworth&#x2F;video&#x2F;760080103729276...</a><p>&gt; <i>The interesting thing about this is that it&#x27;s not taking away something that was human and making it a robot. We&#x27;ve been forced to talk to computers in computer language. And this is turning that around.</i>
  • pmkary1 hour ago
    What a man!