If this technique can lead to an AI capable of learning many previously un achievable tasks with minor human input, I would think it's progress in creating AI and not not a step at all.
If I played pitfall as a child, I wouldn't know what to do without context (money bags good, and what not), but an older sibling may say "go over there, there's money bags".
I actually remember being confused by pitfall and just dyeing a lot actually.
Fair enough, if demand keeps battery prices steady.
I know my next car is going to be a PHEV, but that's because the Fusion is super cheap used, and would cut my trips to the gas station to about 25% of current (some of that being the fact that it gets great mileage).
Tesla appears to be doing very well at price point.
GM is trying to not be Kodak, clinging to their old products rather than trying to shift with the market.
I'm not sure GM is doing the correct thing, but it wouldn't shock me. The risk I see them taking is that as price points get lower, the likelihood of overnight charging being an option go down (requires a driveway), but GM wants to beat Tesla to affordable long range EVs, on the assumption that the market really wants long range EVs over gasoline.
GM does appear to get EVs with the Volt, Bolt, and Spark EV not feeling under powered.
Random article on Tesla sales, I'm not sure they can keep it up, but if I didn't have a good electric plan in place as a manufacturer, I would be concerned. Long range EVs are dominating the pricepoints they are available in (check July and August).
(biased source obviously, but I trust that the numbers are true, it may not hold in monthly sales going forward).
And as time goes on long range electric vehicles will become cheaper while the PHEVs will remain expensive (since their cost comes more from complexity instead of battery pack).
I'm sad to see the Volt go, but I doubt it had much life left in it going forward anyway, the market seems to show that a long range EV doesn't stress people out so much (I personally would prefer a Volt to a Model 3, but I'm not normal people it seems).
If I'm not not mistaken, Itanium requires the compiler to through instructions in parallel and executes them all at once (VLIW).
This was a method to improve performance without speculative execution, unfortunately, it doesn't work as well as the CPU taking things out of order and predicting.
I just got a OnePlus 6t with a teardrop notch and it's nice.
The notch goes away for full screen apps, and I only loose a notification or two, well worth it.
I wish the phone was two inches shorter and a qaurter in narrower, but nobody else seems to, also, a real fingerprint reader with gestures would be better than zero bezel bottom (I had a cheap phone ages ago that had this, and I miss it).
But in every way the teardrop notch is better than a bezel (I suppose someone that wanted better speakers could disagree).
If this technique can lead to an AI capable of learning many previously un achievable tasks with minor human input, I would think it's progress in creating AI and not not a step at all.
If I played pitfall as a child, I wouldn't know what to do without context (money bags good, and what not), but an older sibling may say "go over there, there's money bags".
I actually remember being confused by pitfall and just dyeing a lot actually.
Sure, but I've had over 30 years of human guidance to get there.
How effective is general purpose Real Intelligence without being guided?
The Octopus is maybe an answer?
Isn't that how deep blue beat a human grand master the first time?
Seems a good step.
There hasn't been double digit growth their for the better part of a decade, and never has their been a decade of double digit growth.
Isn't that what the US winning the game of chicken would look like?
Fair enough, if demand keeps battery prices steady.
I know my next car is going to be a PHEV, but that's because the Fusion is super cheap used, and would cut my trips to the gas station to about 25% of current (some of that being the fact that it gets great mileage).
Isn't that the opposite of what GM is doing here?
Sure, the car part I guess, but they appear to be shifting hard towards electric, right?
Seems to me they are trying real hard to not be Kodak (we'll see if it works).
Tesla appears to be doing very well at price point.
GM is trying to not be Kodak, clinging to their old products rather than trying to shift with the market.
I'm not sure GM is doing the correct thing, but it wouldn't shock me. The risk I see them taking is that as price points get lower, the likelihood of overnight charging being an option go down (requires a driveway), but GM wants to beat Tesla to affordable long range EVs, on the assumption that the market really wants long range EVs over gasoline.
GM does appear to get EVs with the Volt, Bolt, and Spark EV not feeling under powered.
Random article on Tesla sales, I'm not sure they can keep it up, but if I didn't have a good electric plan in place as a manufacturer, I would be concerned. Long range EVs are dominating the pricepoints they are available in (check July and August).
(biased source obviously, but I trust that the numbers are true, it may not hold in monthly sales going forward).
https://cleantechnica.com/2018...
I hope that GM does something similar to a Spark EV again, but purpose built, that's a fun little car.
They're expensive though due to the complexity.
And as time goes on long range electric vehicles will become cheaper while the PHEVs will remain expensive (since their cost comes more from complexity instead of battery pack).
I'm sad to see the Volt go, but I doubt it had much life left in it going forward anyway, the market seems to show that a long range EV doesn't stress people out so much (I personally would prefer a Volt to a Model 3, but I'm not normal people it seems).
BTC is somehow different, you can get and spend it in fairly anonymous ways and you can pay your OH state tax with it.
I'm not sure what you mean by the rest of your post though.
They will learn the details from the audit.
Foreign currency triggers gains/loss when converted to USD, I don't see why bitcoin would be any different.
I tend to agree with you.
My point is that everyone is ragging on the treasurer for allowing this, when to me it seems like an intelligent way to capture revenue that is due.
I assume this is to associate wallets with real identities and then nail them with taxes.
Oh, you day traded crypto and made $10k in 2017, well, we'd like our cut of the shorterm capital gains.
Took six seconds to load on my phone.
The site is actually faster than the app.
Yeah, but 2008-2010 you didn't get many commissiobs.
If I'm not not mistaken, Itanium requires the compiler to through instructions in parallel and executes them all at once (VLIW).
This was a method to improve performance without speculative execution, unfortunately, it doesn't work as well as the CPU taking things out of order and predicting.
That's my understanding anyway.
Sure, let's run out of oil using it for fuel because Texas, Alaska, North Dakota, and Canada have lots. Good call.
This is exactly why we should be switching out its use where we can.
They accumulate all of your tracking numbers which is nice.
Sometimes if I see something from the city I know to actually take my mail in.
Sure, except they don't solve my only real complaint (size).
I guess turning the phone upside-down for a selfie isn't bad, but slide out mechanism sounds annoying.
I just got a OnePlus 6t with a teardrop notch and it's nice.
The notch goes away for full screen apps, and I only loose a notification or two, well worth it.
I wish the phone was two inches shorter and a qaurter in narrower, but nobody else seems to, also, a real fingerprint reader with gestures would be better than zero bezel bottom (I had a cheap phone ages ago that had this, and I miss it).
But in every way the teardrop notch is better than a bezel (I suppose someone that wanted better speakers could disagree).
Hmmm, I wonder if I can cancel votes and revote here, I don't think so.
I believe when I hit the vote button, a physical piece of paper is punched that drops into a lock box.
This is certainly a point in favor of paper ballots (hand paper ballots, pretty sure they're paper in my state too)..
Boss: vote for candidate A to keep your job
Me: I destroyed my paper
Though perhaps it's an acceptable puncture of anonymity since cell phone video recorders basically allow that much puncture anyway.
If I can verify my vote, someone can peel my skin with a carrot peeler until I verify it.