General statistics
List of Youtube channels
Youtube commenter search
Distinguished comments
About
Martinit0
Lex Fridman
comments
Comments by "Martinit0" (@Martinit0) on "Lex Fridman" channel.
Previous
1
Next
...
All
Damn, Walter Isaacson knows exactly how to be the fly on the wall that we'd all like to be AND he knows how write it up well.
83
Tell us more about the role you are going to play :-)
9
That may be, but Tesla has Shadow mode. That is a more natural and scalable way of validating new release candidates. Tesla's pipeline for improving their FSD seems much more scalable and more likely to gather the true crazy corner cases.
5
Why do you think that? He is solving a very hard problem that far bigger enterprises have given up on.
4
Pieter, how do you manage to code a whole startup in one month? Pieter: "Easy, I code at 1.5x"
3
Actually horses are more autonomous than regular cars.
3
Hi Lex, regarding intuitive understanding of QM by AI I'm sure you saw this article https://arxiv.org/abs/1909.13789 about Hamiltonia Generative Networks
2
or more reliable. Thinking about bindings...
2
19:00 "Computers can share information instantly" - well data - yes, but sharing information across computers (or even different softwares) requires common understanding of the format, i.e. a common language. Any business that has ever attempted to make two softwares work together knows how difficult that problem is. Consequently, I suspect that sharing information between humans connected via Neuralink will have a similar challenge: sharing of thoughts will require the translation of thoughts into a common language. Currently this is performed by converting our thoughts to speech or writing. This will be a non-trivial problem. We don't know how common or different in_detail the neurological connections and internal representation of thoughts are between humans. It could very well be that sharing of thoughts via Neuralink will still require users to formulate some kind of internal speech and that would likely slow down the sharing process significantly.
2
Carry on, carry on. That sound was you leveling up.
2
"Delete" is the most important key - Yuval
2
I think the first hurdle is for both parties to WANT to negotiate. Right now it seems both sides are in the "let's first try to bang our heads" mode.
1
Well, the first problem as a researcher is to select a worthy problem to solve (assuming you are not working for a corporation that will hand you a problem to solve). This is not easy at all, if you want to be both useful and realistic. I agree with Musk here: the difficult part is not the correct answer but to ask the right question.
1
The biggest "risk" to get autonomous driving regulatory approval is that edge cases for autonomous cars will be different from edge cases for human drivers. We could then end up looking at accidents that are easy to avoid for humans and conclude that conclude that humans are safer drivers.
1
10:50 I just googled "Pythagoras theorem" and the first result is Encyclopædia Britannica. Greedy bastards.
1
Are you sure? He's pulling in like $200k A MONTH. He's got half a dozen money printers, there is no need for a better "strategy" unless he really wants to go into asteroid mining.
1
It's possible but you need distribution, i.e. a large base of followers that you can sell to or at least will share your stuff with friends
1
Locked-in state - frightening
1
Lex, what if your robot dog wiggling with his tail is just an "adversarial" pattern that is (predictably) trigger a certain emotion in you?
1
How does a framework increase revenue?
1
I'm a bit divided on computer games and building worlds - I think games are probably today's biggest sponge of creativity and productivity and I don't mean that in a good way. Games just fast-forward your life clock with nothing to show for it.
1
Pieter Levels is his name.
1
It's also incredibly difficult for a single human to make significant progress for humanity. We are just adding our little mosaic piece (if we are smart and motivated enough). The very best of us may be able to add several pieces (think Einstein) - but we all stand on the shoulders of giants, our ancestors who added their pieces. All that only works out so well, because we can effectively communicate across space and time using written language.
1
3:08:40 I was wondering how you could get anything done in a coworking space with other people around but Level's concept of having a 45min work period where you pay a $1 fine per word said followed by a 15min break sound really great, if you can get people to stick to it.
1
He mentioned the downside of increased maintenance when the framework comes out in a new version.
1
Commercial product: https://catalog.m-files.com/shop/m-files-smart-subjects/
1
I would really like to see that animation that his student has prepared. Maybe you can ask for it once it has been presented.
1
Have you considered Berlin?
1
Coding is the easy part. The hard part is selling it.
1
What I am wondering: how many more biographies will be written about Musk? I mean he's barely 50 and we haven't even reached Mars yet.
1
Fantastic guest! You got to ask the meaty questions. I found that Christof Koch's personal website has many of his articles for download: https://christofkoch.com/ Integrated Information Theory: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integrated_information_theory Scientific article "What is the function of the Claustrum?" https://web.archive.org/web/20100609101939/http://www.klab.caltech.edu/news/crick-koch-05.pdf
1
People think it's easy to be that way but it's not. It's hard to be that brutal. You have to sacrifice a little bit of your humanity each time - hopefully for a good cause.
1
Wait, are you saying we are not mining bitcoin?
1
Because if you are a professional interior designer being able to show a great render makes it easier to sell your service. Think about how else you would promote your service.
1
Previous
1
Next
...
All