Programmer, Writer, and Thought Criminal
Yes. They allow us to take a peek at Moore’s mind. I remember how sound his idea about Anarchy was in V for Vendetta. He gives so much thought to everything he writes.
I think I like Sodom and Gomorrah the least. Proust’s view on homosexuality seems partial.
Manufacturing Consent is worth reading for its relevance. Two serious wars are going on and the media is still using the same formulas.
The Riddler is fun to read.
This is wholesome. All we ever see is companies trying to push you to buy a new one.
It is interesting to see the Pope using secular arguments instead of simply saying God won’t approve (which is completely valid from a religious perspective). The invocation of God in any serious opinion is silly, and now even religious leaders know that.
Well… I was -4 years old when the last issue published. Definitely lucky.
Here’s mine: https://hermitage.utsob.me 😅
In the case of current LLMs, we can tell. These LLMs are not black boxes to us. It is hard to follow the threads of their decisions because these decisions are just some hodgepodge of statistics and randomness, not because they are very intricate thoughts.
We can’t compare the outputs, probably, but compute the learning though. Imagine a human with all the literature, ethics, history, and all kind of texts consumed like that LLMs, no amount of trick questions would have tricked him to believe in racial cleansing or any such disconcerting ideas. LLMs read so much, and learned so little.
Yes. LLMs generate texts. They don’t use language. Using a language requires an understanding of the subject one is going to express. LLMs don’t understand.
Swann’s Way by Marcel Proust
By far liked it. His style is surely captivating.
As a Bangladeshi I have the same thing to say. This is even unthinkable here. Not even students will find it appropriate here.
Here’s a good introduction: https://maggieappleton.com/garden-history
A Digital Garden is a website where nurture your thoughts publicly. Mistakes are fine (unlike in blogs, where we tend to publish only the finished works), interactions are encouraged.
First Person by Rituparno Ghosh
This is a collection of columns Ghosh wrote. He was a critically acclaimed director (and actor) of mostly Bengali films known for his aesthetics and sensitivity. On top of that, he was also an LGBTQ activist. I know a few people who used to be homophobes but changed their opinion after watching his works.