In fairness, it's possible that if 100 companies try seemingly bad ideas, 1 of them will turn out to be extremely profitable.
jsomae
Sure, but by randomly guessing code you'd get 0%. Getting 48% right is actually very impressive for an LLM compared to just a few years ago.
But I didn't know it happened with age
Does everyone become lactose intolerant with age?
Huh, I didn't know about this. What ingredient(s) cause(s) the problem?
The thing you're talking about is not Mac and Cheese.
They made the right call. Macaroni and cheese is definitely that good.
Yeah I agree with you, but I was just refuting your claim that it's not perceivable even if you try.
It's pretty easy to discern refresh rate with the human eye if one tries. Just move your cursor back and forth really quickly. The number of ghost cursors in the trail it leaves behind (which btw only exist in perception by the human eye) is inversely proportional to the refresh rate.
Imagine liking only one thing.
(I like nothing)
A rock concert emanating from a point will sound considerably louder at 5 feet vs 30 feet and will make just as much of a difference as 50 feet vs 300.
Of course, accoustics in a concert hall are designed to minimize this difference. Doesn't explain jet fighters though.
Now non-coders can finally wield the foot-gun once reserved only for coders! /s
Truth be told, computer engineering should really be something that one needs a licence to do commercially, just like regular engineering. In this modern era where software can be ruinous to someone's life just like shoddy engineering, why is it not like this already.