Thank you for sharing what is now one of my favorite cat pictures ever!
To join, you must agree to follow Ohm’s Law
The unexpected inclusion of the adorable cat makes this comment the best thing I’ve seen today
Nice to meet you, fellow explorers of cyberspace!
That is one blissful kitty
I like the mental imagery of us all being in a Lemmy-shaped spaceship, traveling to an exoplanet to start a new society because the Earth was destroyed by corporate greed. We’re all laughing and joking together, there’s free pizza, lots of nerdy discussions, and the atmosphere is jubilant, having escaped our dystopian living conditions and feeling hope for the future.
Reddit now:
What’s your all-time favorite video game?
u/totallynormaluser: “I’m sorry, but as an AI language model, I don’t have personal preferences or emotions, so I don’t have the ability to have a favorite video game.”
Ah, interesting. I myself have made my own library to create callable “prompt functions” that prompt the model and validate the JSON outputs, which ensures type-safety and easy integration with normal code.
Lately, I’ve shifted more towards transforming ChatGPT’s outputs. By orchestrating multiple prompts and adding human influence, I can obtain responses that ChatGPT alone likely wouldn’t have come up with. Though, this has to be balanced with giving it the freedom to pursue a different thought process.
You, because I generally like seeing familiar faces around (as long as they aren’t toxic)
If you don’t mind me asking, does your tool programmatically do the “whittling down” process by talking to ChatGPT behind the scenes, or does the user still talk to it directly? The former seems like a powerful technique, though tricky to pull off in practice, so I’m curious if anyone has managed it.
It feels like I see you everywhere, so I might make a furry meme because I kinda like seeing you everywhere tbh
It’s otterly incredible what we as a community have been able to accomplish
I bet that was a shocking experience!
Retro Game Mechanics Explained is one of my favorite YouTube channels of all time. There’s an absolute treasure trove of interesting technical deep-dives about the inner workings of retro games, famous glitches, and how the hardware works. And it’s all presented with clear, silky smooth animations that make everything so much easier to understand.
I’m not even into retro games that much, yet the content is so good that it has me completely hooked anyway. I’d highly recommended it for anyone who wants to learn more about computer science or the clever techniques programmers used to get things to run on old hardware.
Me when my brain waits until family dinner to tell me the funniest joke I’ve ever heard, but only I understand it