an exponential curve to do with text generation models, is history attention
being log proportional to how many patterns you need. so you need more than
than 10% compression, you need an impossible amount.
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My context model mixing high order modelling (order0-20) with Online Learning
got the 100MB losslessly compressed to 24MB bytes in 34 mins. C++. Now I'm 9MB
away from world record. I had to come up with my own mixing formula. It uses an
exponential curve, I'm unsure if this is what others use
how dangerous are viruses, and it will show how dangerous a nanobot is. why do
they do x, look in your microscope.
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So you know, we KNOW nanobots and metal men are coming, they will be in the lab
with tentacles and 50 eyes n their head etc. But what's in the skull? What in
his hand exactly? What in THAT? And what's between these views? I.e. what is in
the hallway near lab? Where do the nanobots return to?
zoom in, in what way?
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On Wednesday, January 29, 2020, at 4:32 PM, Matt Mahoney wrote:
> We aren't smart enough to look ahead more than one advance in intelligence,
> or else we could just skip to that step.
Hehe. "me thinks replicating nanobots will take over one day, but can't make
them"
We are getting smarter on a
I think Vernor Vinge meant a singularity in the mathematical sense. At
least that was my interpretation of his paper. If each doubling or n-fold
increase of progress takes half the time, then that's exactly what you get.
We can't say it won't happen because a singularity is an event horizon on
our
Well, with my example above, the volume does keep growing non-linearly lol. So
in a sense, yes, the singularity is sorta real.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c3I2zeoUbzg <-look free nrg. =) infinito.
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"In either case, the numbers are finite, so there will be no singularity."
Does the average person (or indeed any person) who uses the term "singularity"
genuinely expect that any physical quantity will go to infinity? That was not
my impression. I take "technological singularity" as a
a 1024 qbit computer is already 10^308, a small exponential qbit quantum
computer would be something like 2^1 billion. which is even more. i dont
think putting natural amplitude limits on a quantum computers power actually is
what you do... more think of permutations of space, a chess
On Wed, Jan 29, 2020, 1:25 PM wrote:
> what if a quantum computer isnt a finite amount of qbits, its actually an
> exponential amount.
>
Lloyd calculated the computing capacity of the universe to be 10^120
quantum operations and 10^90 bits. https://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0110141
A qubit flip
Events are exponential, I think once the group settles and runs out of
updates/resources they hang/wait, until another system finishes it's S
curve.so it's many S curves happening at different times, slowly combining,
and faster later on.
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Remember I drew a pic few months ago showing how Earth radiating replicators
like a growing sphere means it can double. Earth can touch/eats 6 planets
around itself, then can touch 2456..170. The larger the volume the
larger volume it can gain
Its only if secrets are kept. maybe I cant, But I would normally...
things get too precious, but I do respect u Stefan, but I need more friends
in person, not on the internet - its too untrustworthy... :P
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what if a quantum computer isnt a finite amount of qbits, its actually an
exponential amount.
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On Wed, Jan 29, 2020, 1:14 AM wrote:
> If we ignore all this detail, we can see Evolution of Earth has been
> exponential.
>
Evolution is chaotic, not exponential. It has long periods where nothing
happens, punctuated by mass proliferation and mass extinction when a new
species evolves a major
"once the passcode is broken, all the jail inmates can run past the door".
thats only if its not kept a secret, by the person that works it out.
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