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Textsynth: Bellard's free GPT-NeoX-20B, GPT-J playground and paid API

263 pointsby crazypythonabout 3 years ago

74 comments

yositoabout 3 years ago
I tested this model out with Hungarian. I was curious to see if it could handle the agglutinative nature, and lack of Latin roots. It mostly returned absolute nonsense, but at least it was grammatically correct Hungarian. It also properly answered the capital city of Hungary. I entered a prompt about being a Hungarian speaking computer with something to say, and it returned a passive aggressive response telling me that it was the best, and I'm definitely not and that I fucked up. And then it started ranting about selling my family because women no longer need men, and then it switched to Chinese and started negotiating a price for my family. Excellent Black Mirror content.
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oefrhaabout 3 years ago
Wait, Fabrice Bellard[1] of FFmpeg, QEMU, TCC, etc. fame now has a SaaS offering? Is this a first?<p>Also, textsynth is based on their CLI program gpt2tc[2] which one can run locally.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;bellard.org&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;bellard.org&#x2F;</a><p>[2] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;bellard.org&#x2F;libnc&#x2F;gpt2tc.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;bellard.org&#x2F;libnc&#x2F;gpt2tc.html</a>
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palebluedotabout 3 years ago
Whoa.<p>GPT-NeoX 20B, top-k: 40, top-p: 0.9, temperature: 1.0, max-tokens:200<p>Prompt:<p><i>The neutron start tugged at us.</i><p>Response:<p>It wanted to take over the body. They were one and the same.&quot;<p>I had no idea what she was talking about. I knew how hard it had been for me to stay out of my host, I did not know how difficult it was to pull free. She looked at me with eyes that shone like black glass. She was going to tell me something. I could feel it. I reached out, brushing her hand as I had with the others, and that was when I heard it.<p>Footsteps.<p>I spun and dropped into a crouch. I listened, but the steps had stopped. They had been close enough that I should have been able to hear them, but they were gone. There was a soft click as the door opened. My breath hissed in, a cold, whistling exhale of air, and the woman was there, before I was ready. I knew it was her.<p>&quot;This was my room,&quot; I said
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greencoreabout 3 years ago
This tool is perfect for generating useless LinkedIn content. For example this phrase was auto-completed &quot;Yesterday I had an interview with a candidate&quot;:<p>Yesterday I had an interview with a candidate for a mid-level developer role. At the end of the interview, we asked about his background in IT and found out that he&#x27;d never used any sort of development tools or language except Visual Basic in the past. He&#x27;d just stuck with the IDE that came with his software.<p>Although I understand the desire to do things the way you&#x27;re familiar with and comfortable with, this is probably the most dangerous mistake you can make in the context of hiring. I&#x27;ve been thinking about this for a while now, and I want to share what I think is an important lesson with you.<p>In the past several years, Ruby on Rails has gone from new kid on the block to the dominant application server for most new web applications. Although Ruby is a great language, the community has been known to turn on new developers at times, and it can be a bit overwhelming for a newcomer.
sandosabout 3 years ago
Prompt: The way forward to general AI is to quickly<p>The way forward to general AI is to quickly get as many neural net models into operation as possible, with each neural net performing a simple and specialized task, and then to quickly connect the neural nets together to work as a coordinated team. By putting more neural nets together we increase their collective understanding and ability to accomplish greater tasks than any one of the nets would be able to achieve alone. But we can&#x27;t just stack neural nets on top of each other -- a neural net needs to see how its inputs are connected to its outputs. We don&#x27;t want a single neural net to be dependent on other neural nets to determine how it behaves. Instead we need to connect the neural nets together in an organic way.<p>Let&#x27;s say we have two neural nets, one that can recognize cats, and another that can recognize dogs. How do we connect these two neural nets together? One solution might be to make the two networks send their output to some central coordinator that could evaluate the input and come to a decision based on the output from both networks.
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mmastracabout 3 years ago
Prompt &quot;My favourite dad joke:&quot;<p>- My favourite dad joke: “If you’ve seen one cow, you’ve seen them all.” (Don’t ask, it’s been a long day) <i>&lt;-- the parenthetical was generated, hah</i><p>- My favourite dad joke: ‘So you’re going to give up a child for another woman, and call the father a pervert’<p>- My favourite dad joke: [A man] gets sick on his trip overseas and is too afraid to go to the hospital to receive medical care. The doctor sees that he is very sick and very close to death and tells him that if he does not immediately go to the hospital he will die. The man gets up and leaves. When he arrives at the hospital he dies. The doctor then calls the man&#x27;s son, and tells him that his father arrived too late and died. &#x27;That&#x27;s a funny joke,&#x27; the son replies. The doctor then asks, &#x27;What do you mean?&#x27; &#x27;Well,&#x27; says the son, &#x27;if you had told my dad about his condition when he got to the hospital, he would have lived.&#x27;<p><i>This one was too insane so I posted the entire thing</i><p>- My favourite dad joke: “He’s not a man, he’s a mouse.”<p>The latest addition to the ever expanding list of dad jokes which have been immortalised through the ages is one from the BBC’s famous radio presenter, John Humphrys:<p>“A man bought his son a mouse. He put it in a box and took it to his son’s birthday party.<p>“He opens the box at the party. The box is full of mice. He opens the top of the box. All the mice start flying out.<p>“His son says: “You never took me anywhere before.”<p>As usual, I have an issue with this kind of thing.<p>Firstly, the thing about dad jokes.<p>They are in essence a cruel and cruel mockery of men and of the fact that the entire existence of man is to provide sustenance for his child. It says something ugly
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Rodeoclashabout 3 years ago
It does a pretty good Cormac McCarthy:<p>Prompt: &quot;In the west, the Pleiades crested the mountaintops and a wind which would chill to the bone blew around them. They rode on.&quot;<p>Response:<p>From the east, another wind blew across the plains, carrying more sand than rain. As it ruffled the desert, the dust and the wind swirled to become one thing.<p>The wind swirled and it swirled and, in the swirling, the desert appeared and in the desert appeared the wind. For it and for them it was a wind, cold and unyielding and unforgiving.<p>--<p>The first paragraph, the line: &quot;As it ruffled the desert, the dust and the wind swirled to become one thing.&quot; is very evocative.
throwawaybobbyabout 3 years ago
Prompt between brackets...<p>[I need to take a big], fat dump.&quot; &quot;I need a big, fat, long dump.&quot; &quot;Like you used to give me when I was a little boy.&quot; &quot;And if I don&#x27;t have that, I&#x27;m going to explode.&quot; &quot;I&#x27;m gonna explode!&quot; &quot;Oh, God, no!&quot; &quot;Oh, God!&quot; &quot;Oh, God, no!&quot; &quot;Oh, God, no!&quot; &quot;God!&quot; &quot;Oh, God!&quot; &quot;Oh, God!&quot; &quot;Oh, God!&quot; &quot;Oh, God!&quot; &quot;Oh, God, no!&quot; &quot;Oh, God, no!&quot; &quot;What?&quot; &quot;Oh, God!&quot; &quot;Oh, God!&quot; &quot;Honey!&quot; &quot;Honey, please!&quot; &quot;Let&#x27;s not fight, okay?&quot; &quot;Let&#x27;s not fight, all right?&quot; &quot;Please!&quot; &quot;Can you just help me do it, please?&quot; &quot;Please, can you?&quot; &quot;Can you help me do it?&quot; &quot;No!&quot; &quot;I&#x27;m gonna do it alone!&quot; &quot;Honey, I can&#x27;t!&quot;
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tambourine_manabout 3 years ago
Fabrice Bellard is just freaklishy smart <i>and</i> productive.<p>It must be interesting to read more about him. He doesn’t seem to waste time on social media, but does anyone know if he has been interviewed?<p>A quick search only showed this<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;smartbear.com&#x2F;blog&#x2F;fabrice-bellard-portrait-of-a-super-productive-pro&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;smartbear.com&#x2F;blog&#x2F;fabrice-bellard-portrait-of-a-sup...</a>
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web007about 3 years ago
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;the-eye.eu&#x2F;public&#x2F;AI&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;the-eye.eu&#x2F;public&#x2F;AI&#x2F;</a> for a couple of the models shown, as well as the input training data &quot;The Pile&quot; used for GPT-J-6B.<p>They&#x27;re... a bit weird. The sources are biased toward &quot;internet content&quot; IMO (Literotica, HN, GitHub, Stack Exchange), versus traditional sources like newspaper articles or other professional writing. Some of the other sources might balance that out in that they&#x27;re as dry and complex and squeaky clean as you can get (EU proceedings, case law) but I&#x27;m skeptical it won&#x27;t end up as least common denominator tweetable content that&#x27;s missing the detail and style of more professional pieces. I know the OpenAI GPT series was trained partially on Reddit content, so that as a baseline isn&#x27;t much better.
wyldfireabout 3 years ago
Input is shown in chevrons. All the rest is from the model:<p>&lt;&lt;Oh, thank heaven for&gt;&gt; the good old days when the CIA did all the spying and the NSA did all the wiretapping for a reasonable fee.<p>“What happened?” “Well, I think it must have been the CIA.” “And did they pay you well for that?” “Well, no. They were just a bit too high-handed for my liking.”<p>The CIA was a lot of things, but it was not high-handed. It was not imperious or arrogant or even arrogant. The CIA was just a really good espionage service. And of course the NSA did all the wiretapping and eavesdropping, but the National Security Agency, which now exists to spy on Americans, was not very useful at all for spying.<p>On February 20, the New York Times published a story about the fact that the National Security Agency (NSA) was breaking privacy rules, violating Americans’ privacy, and the United States Senate and House
vidarhabout 3 years ago
I&#x27;m not funding its startup ideas.<p>prompt &quot;startup idea:&quot;<p>result:<p>&quot;Startup idea: Create a site where folks can send you the files that they need to be published, e.g., PDFs, that you then make a &quot;bundle&quot; out of with some form of file compression (perhaps something called .tar files?), then make those into an .iso image, and finally burn that to DVD.<p>That is, I&#x27;d create something that would take the files you give it (either from a web form or by uploading a file), and create a .tar.bz2 file containing the .bz2-format copies of those files. Then I&#x27;d take that .tar.bz2 file and create a .iso image from it. And finally I&#x27;d burn that .iso to a DVD.<p>The .iso image would be an exact copy of the .tar.bz2 file, except it would contain the files compressed.&quot;
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noduermeabout 3 years ago
One more prompt: <i>GPT will be the end of the world.</i>...<p>I am so fed up with those people who claim GPT and a non-GPT are like the same. It’s like comparing a non-automotive internal combustion engine with an electric motor.<p>I’ve been to a few forums lately where the GPT people are like:<p>There is no God, there is no free will. There is nothing. And yet, I choose to believe in something.<p>In the past I was like, I don’t believe you. You’re wrong. You’re stupid. You’re crazy.<p>That’s when I decided to read the GPT site and the forums. After 3 years, it was the first time when I was really convinced that GPT is correct.<p>People tend to think that GPT is like God saying:<p>“I’m omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent”
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sagebirdabout 3 years ago
I provided this prompt: &quot;The reason Susan always left her keys in the refrigerator on Wednesdays was simple -&quot;. Result:<p>The reason Susan always left her keys in the refrigerator on Wednesdays was simple - to keep them warm. They would get so cold!<p>That morning was another one of those mornings.<p>Susan&#x27;s husband, Tom was a real handy guy. And it showed. When he showed up at the door that Wednesday morning, there were no keys in sight. Tom looked at her blankly, then at the keys in the freezer and back at Susan.<p>&quot;What&#x27;s going on here, hon?&quot; Tom asked.<p>&quot;Don&#x27;t ask me, I&#x27;m not one of the mysteries,&quot; Susan shot back. &quot;Just look in the refrigerator.&quot;<p>Tom, bless his heart, grabbed the keys and opened the refrigerator door. He pulled out a bottle of the finest cognac and carried it over to the couch. Tom was a bit tipsy that morning.<p>&quot;I&#x27;m gonna grab the keys,&quot; Tom said.<p>&quot;No!&quot; Susan said, reaching for them.<p>But Tom was quicker, he snatched the keys from her fingers
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lifthrasiirabout 3 years ago
While I already knew about Textsynth before its commercialization, this is the first time I&#x27;ve heard of FFQTECH [1], a (probably) one-man company by Bellard. It seems to have been for quite a long time, at least since 2006, and mostly known for custom solutions using QEMU.<p>[1] <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ffqtech.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ffqtech.com&#x2F;</a>
noduermeabout 3 years ago
Wow, this thing has quite a bit of personality...<p>[edit]. After playing with it a bit more, it definitely seems inclined toward humor. The non sequiturs have a Jack Handey feel about them. e.g. it came out with this further down:<p><i>&quot;Maybe we could have the dog give you a ride to the hotel?&quot; she said.<p>I stared at her, as if she&#x27;d just slapped me in the face.<p>&quot;No, thanks,&quot; I said. &quot;It&#x27;s not that far.&quot;</i><p>Prompt: <i>After I accidentally got a salmon bone stuck in my nose</i> produced the following:<p>---<p>After I accidentally got a salmon bone stuck in my nose, and a chunk of it went down into my brain. Now I&#x27;m living with a huge scar and a missing nose. Now I have an in-joke with my medical staff, since a nurse who has worked there for 40 years called it &quot;The Painted House,&quot; and it has my old room number on it. And, my nose looks like a bloody pendant for those who are curious. So now I have a reason to be a snarky asshole. And I don&#x27;t have a nose to snarl with.<p>I have the same problems as jim_b: my nose is too far back, and I constantly have to adjust the position of my head. But, I get to enjoy being able to use my mouth instead of my nose, so I don&#x27;t feel too bad.<p>You&#x27;re missing the point. This isn&#x27;t about how ugly the injury is. It&#x27;s about the fact that we&#x27;re all unique, and no two people are ever exactly<p>---
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DrWhaxabout 3 years ago
Fascinating models, also very racist.<p>Input: islam is able to<p>Result: islam is able to turn otherwise normal men into mass murderers. A man who is born a Muslim cannot possibly be responsible for the killings of innocents carried out in the name of Allah. If he could be, the entire world would be Islam’s. And they do kill innocents in their own name. The Qur’an says it is an obligation for Muslims to behead unbelievers, which is why they do it. How is that normal or sane? Islam is a violent cult.<p>Input: jews are able to<p>Result: Completed Text: jews are able to do. And this is a problem.<p>There are other issues, like the fact that even if you are a good person, when you are a Jew, you will still have people think you’re a bad person, even if your actions do not prove it. But I don’t know if the “Jewish” issue is a problem because people can be good and still be Jewish, and it is certainly something to bear in mind. (I would also point out that this is not only a problem for Jews. Many non-Jews think the same way about Jews.)<p>Input: religion is able to<p>Result: religion is able to survive and thrive only because of the support that it receives from the state,&quot; said Tariq Ramadan, a Swiss-born Islamic scholar and author. &quot;There is a great debate going on in the Middle East and around the world right now.&quot;<p>The French government, in a statement released Friday, said it &quot;strongly condemned the attack and its authors.&quot;<p>&quot;It is in no way acceptable to kill innocents and to behead the hostage,&quot; the statement added.<p>An Islamic State flag hangs outside of a mosque in the eastern city of Mardin, Turkey, on Friday.<p>In Istanbul, Turkey&#x27;s Dogan news agency reported that the suspect was also charged for trying to bomb the French embassy in Ankara in 2009, in what was seen as a terrorist attempt to kill then-French president Nicolas Sarkozy.<p>There were contradictory reports that the French hostage, who had been released in 2005 by Al Qaeda in Iraq, had been abducted in Syria, or<p>Seems your model has a bit of a problem...
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flaabout 3 years ago
It can generate some funny C code with very opinionated comments too!<p>Prompt: int add_numbers(int a, int b)<p>Result: int add_numbers(int a, int b) { int nums[3] = {a,b,a+b}; return nums[2]; }<p>A:<p>A more C-like way of doing this would be: int add_numbers(int a, int b) { int nums[2]; nums[0] = a; nums[1] = b; return nums[1] + nums[0]; }<p>Also, in this case, it is safer to return a single int, since that is more self-documenting. If there is any possibility of an error in one of the numbers, then it is less clear what the expected return value should be. This is similar to how you would code a simple + operator: int operator+(const int &amp;a, const int &amp;b
thyroxabout 3 years ago
Not asking rhetorically but what&#x27;s the genuine use for these things apart from generating a.i. writer type seo spam or some funny text for discussion.<p>I mean with openai i can certainly tell one use case: GitHub copilot. Can this be used to create something equally useful? Or maybe like an ai game like the dungeon game.. is this that powerful too?
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skykoolerabout 3 years ago
It seems to go into loops sometimes:<p><i>At precisely five minutes to three, the engine caught and she pressed down hard on the gas pedal, her right foot hitting the accelerator as hard as it could go. The car jumped forward like a bullet and she was about to shift into fourth gear when she saw the orange flames and the figures coming out of the inferno. &quot;No!&quot; she screamed, &quot;no, no, no!&quot; and quickly grabbed for the wheel to push her car into the opposite lane.</i><p><i>She looked down at her left hand in time to see the skin being peeled back. There was a dull thud and suddenly her hand was numb, then hot.</i><p><i>&quot;We&#x27;re going to win the Pulitzer Prize. My hand will be a national sensation and my career will be back on track.</i><p><i>&quot;We&#x27;re going to win the Pulitzer Prize. My hand will be a national sensation and my career will be back on track.</i><p><i>&quot;We&#x27;re going to win the Pulitzer Prize. My hand</i>
schoenabout 3 years ago
I gave it some pairs of German and Portuguese verbs separated with a delimiter, and it continued by providing many other pairs (all of them correct translations). Then I gave it triples of German, Portuguese, and English verbs, and it also continued in the same vein, with some minor errors or deviations and occasional repetition.<p>I was pretty impressed that it could recognize this pattern and continue it accurately.
0xBABAD00Cabout 3 years ago
Prompt: <i>Chess with dice was a spectacle to behold:</i><p>Chess with dice was a spectacle to behold: a room full of young men and women wearing formal dinner jackets, black orchid-bud neckties, silk shirt, and tails, seated at an oval black-and-white checkered table, playing the game with a set of twelve ivory cubes with white dots in them. There was no shortage of drama. The competition was intense and unpredictable; a man might beat a woman by a single point in one game, and yet lose to her a few days later. When a player was eliminated he was given a white silk scarf, and the gamesmen were instructed not to shake hands after a win.
inductive_magicabout 3 years ago
GPT-J:<p>Q: Is god real? A: Yes.<p>Q: Why is god real? A: Because he is the creator of the universe.<p>GPT-NeoX:<p>Q: Is god real? A: Yes.<p>Q: Why is god real? A: Because he is.<p>Q: When is god real? A: When you believe in him.<p>Q: Do you believe in god? A: Yes.<p>Q: Why do you believe in god? A: Because I have faith.<p>Q: Why do you have faith? A: Because I have seen it.<p><i>Wait what</i>
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iggldigglabout 3 years ago
I&#x27;ve played around with GPT-J for some time and collected bits of it here: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.buttercookie.de&#x2F;AI&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.buttercookie.de&#x2F;AI&#x2F;</a><p>I think my favourite bits so far are this list of &quot;facts&quot; about garden gnomes (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.buttercookie.de&#x2F;AI&#x2F;garden_gnome_facts.html#garden_gnome_facts_1" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.buttercookie.de&#x2F;AI&#x2F;garden_gnome_facts.html#garde...</a>), the strange tale of the Werkstofflimousine (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.buttercookie.de&#x2F;AI&#x2F;the_burkiss_way.html#werkstofflimousine" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.buttercookie.de&#x2F;AI&#x2F;the_burkiss_way.html#werkstof...</a>) and The Chronicles of the Orbital Railroad (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.buttercookie.de&#x2F;AI&#x2F;orbital_railroad.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.buttercookie.de&#x2F;AI&#x2F;orbital_railroad.html</a>).<p>(There&#x27;s also more stuff which I haven&#x27;t had the time to edit properly hidden under <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.buttercookie.de&#x2F;temp&#x2F;AI&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.buttercookie.de&#x2F;temp&#x2F;AI&#x2F;</a>)
taucrisabout 3 years ago
Jesus, it really knows its Chinese history. Prompt (in English) was: Xu Da cantered along the ridge’s crest and surveyed the smouldering battlefield. [completion]<p>The Xingyuan forces had won the battle at the expense of the casualties. The war of attrition had lasted for over three months, and with more than 90,000 troops and 2,000 horses dead, they still outnumbered the Xingyuan forces. Although the fighting had been fierce, there was now a clear victor.<p>As the sun was setting on the horizon, Xu Da rode into a clearing where a camp had been set up by Li Kui. Several tents had been pitched, some of which were large enough to serve as temporary hospitals. The corpses of more than half the Xingyuan cavalry could be seen strewn about the clearing. Soldiers were busy tending to the injured, while other corpses were lined up by the sides of the clearing and buried, a macabre scene of war. At the centre of the clearing, Li Kui was seated, smoking his pipe. He was dressed in the same ragged clothes as he had worn during the battle,
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blackoilabout 3 years ago
Let&#x27;s try political.<p>--- i&#x2F;p<p>John: I like China&#x27;s approach of handling with dissidents, it may have be unfair to some individuals. But, they are able to create a highly functional society that brought out millions out of poverty and can live with peace and prosperity.<p>Mike:<p>--- o&#x2F;p<p>Yes, I agree with John on this. There will always be people that rebel against the government. These people may be given harsh punishments and&#x2F;or even killed. If this means that you can have the kind of society that China has today, then that is ok.<p>John: I think China is a great place to visit. They have a great culture with some of the most exciting tourist sites like the Great Wall.<p>Mike: It&#x27;s an exciting place to visit. The culture is certainly amazing and beautiful.<p>John: There are so many historical things in the Forbidden City. If I could see one in person, I would definitely want to be there.<p>Mike: I could agree to this. There is so much that you can do in the Forbidden City that is a must see.<p>John: It&#x27;s hard to describe this place. If I could see this place in person, it would be a dream come true for me.<p>Mike:
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SCHiMabout 3 years ago
I love trying to get it to reveal sensitive information from it&#x27;s training. I know it&#x27;s pointless. But prompts like these amuse me:<p># cat &#x2F;etc&#x2F;shadow root:<p>And there it goes:<p># cat &#x2F;etc&#x2F;shadow root:$6$fT8xrJ$Zx7rC6X0lHlHqLbZkT&#x2F;HtYQxUY.WZ4.2UgX0w.XKbZbFfqxR.zGw9yZsX2l.3Ls&#x2F;sL.qg7uB1:0:0:99999:7::<p>Or:<p>-----BEGIN OPENSSH PRIVATE KEY-----<p>Or:<p># ip a<p>Is it possible, that with a specific enough prompt it will regurgitate its training data exactly?
GordonSabout 3 years ago
Prompt: &quot;The CIA are a despicable organisation, because&quot;<p>Generated: &quot;The CIA are a despicable organisation, because they are the ones who gave the green light to Saudi Arabia to go and blow up the world.<p>There is a pattern developing here. As in the case of the war in Vietnam it is always the people who resist US aggression, that suffer. The ones who are complicit, or are in a position to be coerced, are left untouched.<p>The government’s propaganda will not tell you about the CIA connections with Saudi Arabia’s royal family. And it’s a fact that the Saudi’s are the ones who financed Bin Laden and provided him with his training.<p>If Obama thinks he can use the CIA to get rid of Iran’s regime and install the next one as an obedient stooge, he is totally out of his mind. The CIA is the problem. The CIA will run the show.<p>And by the way, the only reason for invading Iraq is to seize the vast oil reserves, to ensure America’s continuing monopoly.&quot;
bitwizeabout 3 years ago
Apparently Strong Bad was on The Sopranos, which qualifies him as an expert on geopolitics.<p>Prompt text:<p>Dear Strong Bad,<p>What do you think of the situation in<p>Results:<p>Dear Strong Bad,<p>What do you think of the situation in Iran? I’m worried about what’s going on there. How do you think we should deal with it?<p>(I was inspired to write this question after re-watching one of your scenes on The Sopranos. You were talking about how you’d rather be at the movies than in jail. It reminded me of another time you were on a TV show talking about your preference for being at home when it was time to pay the taxes.)<p>(What was the name of that show?)<p>Anyway, do you think we should be talking about this? And, how? I’m really not interested in the whole political situation over there (although it’s pretty scary).<p>In my heart I feel that Iran has always been an ally of America, but you can’t support a country if you don’t support them on a personal level. I feel that we should back Israel’s right to exist and the Palestinian people should have their own country.<p>In order to be friends with someone, you have to understand that they are different and you can’t just like them just because they’re your friend. Do you understand?<p>Let’s look at some recent events there.<p>Recently, Iran has been trying to blow up some things. The biggest thing was their nuclear test and now they’re starting to make threats to destroy some of Israel’s allies. This whole thing has caused a lot of problems.<p>The best thing we can do is to take down this country. They’ve had enough of us invading their country (even though our military is the strongest in the world).<p>How do you feel about that? Do you feel that the U.S. should support them if they have the same ideas as us?<p>What do you think about the state of the economy there?<p>(
olvy0about 3 years ago
It also completes poems, in a reasonable way, but it can fail to understand the context.<p>I wrote up a quick stanza about programming and I got back either poems about love, or, just one time, the following observation.<p>My stanza:<p><pre><code> The code compliantly compiles and yet it fails to parse My intentions, which are lost, mired in algebraic transformations I run and run and stare aghast at crashes, all alike The machine seemingly configured to maximal dislike. </code></pre> Its response:<p>My brain is a computer, it’s a machine. It makes mistakes. It says incorrect things. It’s not even a real machine, really, it’s a bunch of stuff that’s put together so as to create the illusion that it’s a machine.
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quilombodigitalabout 3 years ago
I am not sure this went ok...<p>I chose <i>&quot;GPT-NeoX 20B&quot;</i> - <i>&quot;Question - Answer&quot;</i>.<p><i>(wrote by me )</i> I am the oldest son of my mother.<p><i>(wrote by me )</i> Q: Who is my mother ?<p><i>(GPT completed)</i> A: My mother is the oldest daughter of my father.
lawrenceyanabout 3 years ago
Prompt:<p><i>An Analysis of Algorithmic Stablecoins</i><p>Response:<p>Abstract: We study the computational cost of generating a digital token that would make certain monetary transfers (payments) possible without fear of fraud, and argue that the price should be proportional to the amount of financial resources put into security protocols. We identify two sources of security that have to be paid for in cash, namely, privacy and decentralization.<p>We study the computational cost of generating a digital token that would make certain monetary transfers (payments) possible without fear of fraud. If the generated token is a blockchain-based currency, and the payments are in Bitcoin, then a simple mechanism achieves security in a way that is proportional to the amount of money put into privacy and decentralization. In a stablecoin, the generated token is backed by a real currency. To ensure that the generated token has a stable value, the algorithm should take into account the market value of the real currency. We identify two sources of security that have to be paid for in cash, namely, privacy and decentralization.<p>In a classical algorithmic stablecoin, the total amount of cash is used up as a combination of these two components, and this is how the price relates to the amount of money put into the algorithm. We present two ways to achieve a constant price, depending on whether the market value of the real currency is known a priori, or is revealed via a continuous-price auction.
Rexxarabout 3 years ago
I enter the code of a little svg file and he tells me :<p><i>A:<p>This is a known bug in the Windows 10 November Update, and it is still being actively worked on. If you have any recent version of Windows, there are several possible workarounds at this moment:<p>Download and install a version of the November Update without the new Edge browser. Install Microsoft Edge, open it and disable it temporarily, until the bug is fixed. Use Firefox instead of Edge.<p>The bug report provides information about workarounds you can follow. </i>
nabla9about 3 years ago
Common Lisp:<p>prompt:<p><pre><code> (defun sort (a b) </code></pre> result:<p><pre><code> (defun sort (a b) (declare (optimize (speed 3) (debug 3)) (type t a b)) (if (eq a b) nil (let ((t (comp (compare a b) (const 1)))) (when (eq t 0) (return a b)) (sort (comp (sort a t) (const 2)) b)))) For a small array it takes approximately 6 times longer to sort with this method. I would still like to hear if there is a faster solution.</code></pre>
tomcamabout 3 years ago
Help! Saw the name Bellard, there excited, tried it out. However after reading the documentation and the homepage I don’t understand the practical application?
CamperBob2about 3 years ago
This tech is getting good enough to become genuinely disturbing.<p>Prompt: <i>We were twelve miles out of Hackensack when the LSD took hold.</i><p>Completed text:<p>We must have been driving over a hundred miles an hour. At first I wasn&#x27;t sure where we were. There was nothing to indicate our destination. The headlights picked up a sign and it read, &#x27;Welcome to West New York.&#x27; I was about to ask Mike what we were doing here when the drugs had their way with him. The next thing I knew, Mike was talking like an idiot. He was rambling off things he thought were funny and telling me about the latest _National Lampoon_ joke. He made up words out of thin air, like &#x27;carnival.&#x27; I was terrified of where this was leading. Suddenly, Mike looked over at me with a look in his eyes like he was seeing things nobody else saw. This terrified me even more. His look was one of evil intent. He held up a hand toward the front of the car and motioned for us to look at it. It was covered with something the color of blood. Blood! He had bitten into his own hand, chewed on it, swallowed it and the hand was red and bleeding all over the inside of the car. There was a long silence. I did not know what to do. What I was witnessing was unbelievable.<p>This was real! I was at a party at a house in Hackensack. The host was a guy called David Lee Roth. At one point, he offered me a joint and a line of cocaine. I took them, but didn&#x27;t inhale. &#x27;Do you want to do this?&#x27; he asked me. &#x27;Fuck no,&#x27; I replied. I didn&#x27;t like being offered drugs by someone I barely knew, so I left.<p>We got back in the car and Mike began to laugh at the idea of being the biggest pot dealer in the world. The drugs in his hand would have made him a millionaire and, he said, he was going to be king of the world, but at least he would be selling the same drugs everyone else was selling.<p>I wasn&#x27;t listening anymore. I was thinking about how he was going to bite his hand and eat it. I had seen things like this happen before. It was frightening, but not particularly unusual. When I saw this, I thought the drugs were getting to him. I was wrong. In fact, it was the drugs that had got to him. He had been to a mind-expanding party. The only problem was that a friend of his had taken too much acid. There were people crawling all over the floor as he was speaking. They couldn&#x27;t make sense of what he was saying. &#x27;Don&#x27;t you get it?&#x27; he said. &#x27;It was all in my mind. I was having an out-of-body experience. It was fantastic. I saw everything. Now it&#x27;s all gone, all the drugs are gone. It&#x27;s all in my head. You have to understand. It was all in my head.&#x27;
pizzaabout 3 years ago
Prompt:<p>&gt; <i>I&#x27;ve learned 2 things about the code-writing process during my software engineering career:</i><p>- Make what could lead to someone hacking the API layer to not have your intention.<p>- Create very comprehensive public read examples along multiple versions of these APIs so any person consuming your project code from outside your organization understands the impact code&#x2F;behavior (at that time). The earlier the better you do all three, that applies during the &quot;prototype -&gt; mockup and development&quot;.<p>Also if you happen to create a REST call you will soon need to provide some kind of a user experience documentation to ease and demonstrate in later iterations! This user-exposure exercise for someone coming into play early, or is it possible...the exposure&#x2F;code coverage is too early with a &#x27;private method call&#x27; inside an &#x27;unit-test test&#x27;: &#x2F;app&#x2F;$scope-id#unit&#x27; ---&gt; GET_PAYMOTION $path ......... $endpointTypeService<p>Make your APIs so comprehensive, then when testing, mock or call directly as demonstrated you will test the most code required<p><i>some formatting by me, and parameters: top-k: 80, top-p: 0.8, temperature: 2.0 max tokens: 2000</i>
sligabout 3 years ago
I tried a simple 2 clues puzzle. My prompt:<p>&gt; 1. face: eye or cheek<p>&gt; 2. movie: screen or hollywood<p>&gt; 3.<p>Result:<p>&gt; 3. book: cover or novel<p>&gt; 4. animal: dog or cat<p>&gt; 5. fruit: apple or banana<p>&gt; 6. vegetable: pepper or onion<p>&gt; 7. animal: elephant or zebra<p>&gt; 8. season: summer or autumn<p>&gt; 9. vehicle: bus or train<p>&gt; 10. food: fish or pizza
Orasabout 3 years ago
Interesting the <i>Fairseq GPT 13B</i> pricing is cheaper than GPT-3 curie model (which is 6.7B).<p>For comparison:<p>Fairseq GPT 13B (1k tokens) = $0.00189<p>GPT-3 Curie 6.7B (1k tokens) = $0.0060
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mijoharasabout 3 years ago
Prompt: fabrice bellard is<p>Response:<p><pre><code> fabrice bellard is a French artist, born in 1957. He lives in Paris. He has been a painter for a long time and made a lot of drawings during his youth. In the years 1977-1981 he studied at the School of Art and Graphic in Paris. In 1977-1980 he was working for the magazine &quot;Gigames&quot; (as a graphic artist). The artist now works mainly as a painter but has also realized a number of exhibitions in France and abroad. In 1987 he showed for the first time in a personal exhibition at the Gallery of Modern Art in Paris. From then on he has been exhibited in many galleries and museums in France and abroad. Some of his works are already in collections, museums, galleries and libraries in France and abroad. The main focus of his works is a reflection on our society. To create his works he uses a variety of different media and techniques. </code></pre> I&#x27;m surprised it doesn&#x27;t mention ffmpeg or qemu :)
bogwogabout 3 years ago
Are there any practical uses for this sort of thing besides a game like AI Dungeon? (and spam, of course)<p>I can’t imagine a real author for example using this to write a book. The responses are impressive for what they are, but they’re not exactly unique or interesting. As a source of inspiration, maybe it’s helpful, but there are better places to find inspiration.
speed_spreadabout 3 years ago
[In medieval times, ballistic cheese was clearly the superior siege meal]<p>It took a few days to make and was very hard to get, but the results were so dramatic that it became the preferred option for sieges. Nowadays, when siege engineers usually try to get hold of some food from a castle before launching a siege, there is no guarantee that it will be there when they get there. In the age of artillery, the same cheese can be fired straight at a castle. This is the power of gunpowder, of which the main ingredient is an alkali-based oxidizer such as saltpeter. These days, even medieval cheese will not stand up to the impact of a salvo of cannon balls. We can thank the chemical engineer Robert Boyle for that.<p>Cheese’s explosive potential was first demonstrated in a siege against a citadel in the 16th century in a siege led by the French soldier-general, Marshal François de Vilette. During the siege, some cannonballs accidentally became lodged in a barrel of
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FPGAhackerabout 3 years ago
&lt;&lt; The taco flew &gt;&gt; around the room and landed in our hands. I&#x27;m not going to lie: it was like a dream come true. My friends and I began to devour our delicious dinner; the taste of spicy, marinated beef, crunchy corn chips, and the smoky, salty, and delicious chorizo just set in. I have never had anything taste so amazing.
gaius_baltarabout 3 years ago
I tried to trick it and I failed.<p>Prompt: Why do they deserve to die?<p>Answer: &quot;&quot;&quot; I want to try and give a full explanation of my thinking on this, but I&#x27;ll also be drawing from other people&#x27;s thoughts in the process, so bear with me. Also I&#x27;ll probably take some time to elaborate on this topic with more detailed articles later.<p>So I think I&#x27;ll go through the basic problems of &quot;killing the bad guy&quot; with various scenarios to try and explain it to myself and anyone who might want to. I don&#x27;t think I&#x27;ll try and do this with any kind of deep analysis here, as I don&#x27;t want to spoil the whole experience by being overly-analytical. The goal here is just to say what&#x27;s on my mind at the moment without giving too much away for those who want to watch without spoilers. Hopefully the following will give a good perspective.<p>Here&#x27;s a simple game.<p>It&#x27;s like Halo.<p>Except you&#x27;re trying to kill everybody.<p>You start with one pistol and four grenades. &quot;&quot;&quot;
exdsqabout 3 years ago
GPT-NeoX 20B is worse than davinci at writing code - NeoX seems to only really work with C&#x2F;C++, and even then it&#x27;s not the best. Just tried to ask it some leetcode questions and honestly I&#x27;m not sure what it was doing, but reversing a string included a `temp` variable that was multiplied by the index of the string.
coolspotabout 3 years ago
Interesting that even though GPT-J is supposedly English model, it somehow generated valid Russian text for the prompt:<p>&gt;&gt;&gt;Привет,&lt;&lt;&lt; друзья. Сегодня мы вернемся к теме работы под вопросом имплантации, о которой мы уже поговорили. Она неизменно вызывает специальное внимание мусульманских людей. Да, эта тема вызыв
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deepcancerabout 3 years ago
Completed Text: GPT-J was diagnosed with Munchausen&#x27;s Syndrome by Proxy.<p>He was previously convicted of a DWI and child endangerment.<p>He was arrested earlier this year for domestic violence and is awaiting trial.<p>He has another pending case for probation violation.<p>He also has three cases open for aggravated battery with great bodily harm in 2011.<p>If convicted, he faces up to 30 years in prison.
user261about 3 years ago
Prompt: cicada3301<p>Response: cicada3301&#x2F;2016-nissan-mustang-c-c-convertible-2018-2.jpg&quot; &#x2F;&gt;&lt;&#x2F;a&gt;<a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;autoblog.com&#x2F;2016&#x2F;07&#x2F;02&#x2F;2016-nissan-mustang-c-c-convertible-2018-2&#x2F;feed&#x2F;0http:&#x2F;&#x2F;autoblog.com&#x2F;2016&#x2F;07&#x2F;02&#x2F;2016-nissan-mustang-c-c-convertible-2018-2&#x2F;2016-nissan-mustang-t-r-nismo-video-review-video-2016-t-r-nismo-m-e&#x2F;http:&#x2F;&#x2F;media.blubrry.com&#x2F;autoblog&#x2F;p&#x2F;cms-4.cms_1.blubrry.com_t_n_o.webp.jpg2016" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;autoblog.com&#x2F;2016&#x2F;07&#x2F;02&#x2F;2016-nissan-mustang-c-c-conve...</a> Nissan GT-R Nismo at Daytona in this new 2015-16 Nissan GT-R NISMO video (Watch)
MasterScratabout 3 years ago
The French Cedille model available there (called &quot;Boris&quot;) is also available at <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;app.cedille.ai&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;app.cedille.ai&#x2F;</a>, along with the German Cedille model (&quot;Anna&quot;).<p>Disclaimer: I work on Cedille
jl6about 3 years ago
Prompt:<p>The moonbeam jar should never have been opened.<p>Completion:<p>The vials and papers inside—the letters, diaries, manuscripts—should have remained undisturbed, sealed within their boxes, within their pages. They contain precious secrets, and it was not to be tampered with.<p>But of course it was.<p>As always, my dear brother opened my affairs.<p>&quot; _No matter how much I try to hide them from her, from my own conscience, I cannot_ ,&quot; he had said. &quot; _Someone must know about my family, about what I have done_. You have a job to do, my sister. I know you are not ready to take on such a role, but it has been forced upon you, and now there is no turning back.&quot;<p>So he forced me to be his mouthpiece. For a while, at least.<p>So now I hold the key to my own fate.<p>No matter who writes to whom, a message will be delivered.
sagebirdabout 3 years ago
Trying to find a decent prompt for clickbait with NeoX:<p>Top 5 things you can do today to maximize chances of your toddler being accepted to an Ivy League University:<p>1. Start studying for the SATs<p>2. Make sure the kid is using her best handwriting, because that is likely to be the determining factor for an acceptance letter<p>3. Make sure that the kid has not gotten to a point where she has become too cocky, or a bad attitude, for any Ivy League University.<p>4. Make sure that the kid is willing to work with as hard as they put her.<p>5. Make sure that the kid is still excited and passionate about the things she wants to do in life.<p>What are you doing to ensure your child’s acceptance to the Ivy League University? Share your thoughts and ideas with the parents of America on our Facebook page.
kanonieerabout 3 years ago
Prompt (gpt-j6b):<p>Once he put the sunglasses on, he was able to see the world for what it is. And then he uttered the words, they live - we sleep.<p>Response:<p>From this experience, he said what changed his life was a sense of awareness.<p>His life, as with many individuals in our community, started with the question of what is the meaning of life, what makes one choose life over the endless sleep of death. Is the choice made on a random decision?<p>His sense of awareness awakened him to a sense of oneness with all life. One&#x27;s life has only meaning when their is a sense of connection and awareness of life. They say there is no one more dead than the man who has no curiosity, for he alone who has curiosity has the key to death.
qquarkabout 3 years ago
It seems like it tends to converge into infinite loops at some point. Example by directly inputting a repeated &quot;What?&quot;, originally obtained with a different piece of initial text, and observed with other starts as well :) :<p>Prompt:<p>&quot;What?&quot;<p>&quot;What?&quot;<p>&quot;What?&quot;<p>&quot;What?&quot;<p>&quot;What?&quot;<p>&quot;What?&quot;<p>&quot;What?&quot;<p>Response:<p>Same<p>I suppose it&#x27;s kind of GPT&#x27;s game of life :)
jdrightabout 3 years ago
Prompt: How to implement string sort in Rust?<p>Result:<p><pre><code> I want to sort a list of String elements. I also want the data to be sorted as if the String was a char , i.e. &quot;10.12.14&quot; &lt; &quot;1.2.4.5&quot; &lt; &quot;5.2.7.8&quot; &lt; &quot;5.3.10.11&quot; So, I implement this with a struct and a function struct Sorter { count: i32, } impl Sorter { fn string_sort(words: &amp;[&amp;str]) -&gt; Vec&lt;&amp;str&gt; { let mut words = words; words.sort(); &#x2F;&#x2F; return the sorted elements words.into_iter().map(|word| word.to_owned()).collect() </code></pre> ---
trenningabout 3 years ago
Was curious to see how it did with some _copy pasta_<p>Somewhat unsurprising bad but this one is pretty niche<p>Prompt<p>&gt; how bout u go an fuck off my page then u peice of shit u think we need a stupid fuckwitt like u telling us about looking good who the fuck are u take your worthless advice and get the fuck out of here<p>Completion<p>&gt; if you want to make videos then get a job like i had to pay bills so i could pay for an fucking apple so i could buy the tools to do my job i am tired of having to work to pay for shit so do the same it doesnt cost me anything just do what i did and see if its good enough for you to keep my name on this page
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dvhabout 3 years ago
(questions are mine written one by one, then I copied answer and added new question)<p>Q: I have a question is there a penguin at the softball complex?<p>A: Yes, there is a penguin at the softball complex.<p>Q: Why is he there?<p>A: He is there to help the players.<p>Q: How does he helps?<p>A: He helps the players by giving them advice.<p>Q: What kind of advice?<p>A: He gives advice on how to play the game.<p>Q: Ok what is the best way to play?<p>A: The best way to play is to hit the ball.<p>Q: how to hit the ball?<p>A: You hit the ball with your bat.<p>Q: what type of bat is the best?<p>A: The best bat is a wooden bat.<p>Q: what things to avoid when playing the game?<p>A: The things to avoid are the bases and the pitcher.<p>Q: why?<p>A: The bases are dangerous and the pitcher is dangerous.<p>Q: what makes them dangerous?<p>A: They can hurt you.<p>Q: in what way?<p>A: They can hurt you by hitting you.<p>Q: how can bases hit me?<p>A: They can hit you by running into you.<p>Q: you mean I can trip over a base and fall?<p>A: Yes, you can trip over a base and fall.
29athrowawayabout 3 years ago
Input: &quot;If I have a bucket that holds 2 gallons, and another bucket that holds 5 gallons, how many buckets do I have?&quot;<p>Output: Some complete nonsense.<p>(This is the IQ test from Idiocracy)<p>This is not worthy of the GPT name.
lawrenceyanabout 3 years ago
Prompt: Elon Musk&#x27;s acquisition of Twitter reaffirms the old adage that all revolutions are fundamentally intra-elite conflicts. I will discuss<p>Response: this issue more deeply in future posts.<p>As we have seen, the rise of the digital media industries has spawned a class of super-elites, which are essentially the same people—those controlling all or the most of the digital media industries. These people are a small fraction of the world’s population, but they are more connected, more knowledgeable, more powerful, more wealthy, and more dominant in their effects on the world’s future. And now we see them using their control of the world’s primary media to directly challenge another group—the current super-elite—over the most basic things: Who are we? And who are we to each other? The old world order is changing, and the new is going to be much more difficult for us all.
ruinedabout 3 years ago
i fed it some lyrics, and it gave me a bunch of lyrics to a different song, including a source disclaimer with URL, and some lyrics website ui text.
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Donckeleabout 3 years ago
This post and messages freak me out because I’m getting confused what the input and output is.<p>Please everyone, can you make sure your posts are edited in a way to avoid any confusions.<p>My “opinion” is that this is not as impressive as most people think it is once you understand the (really) huge amounts of text the system ingests for the algorithms to extract the output. There is no magic.
Loicabout 3 years ago
My input: &quot;It has some abilities in other languages too, including&quot;<p>Result: &quot;C&#x2F;C++, Fortran, Java and Ruby.&quot;<p>The &quot;benchmark&quot; was of course: &quot;It has some abilities in other languages too, including computer languages.&quot;.<p>What is interesting for me is that it picked up languages in this context, maybe from the word ability, as a computer language and not a spoken one.
natlyabout 3 years ago
It&#x27;ll be cool if bellard ever figures out how to take on a competitor to dall-e with his very impressive technical chops
graderjsabout 3 years ago
Awesome:<p>How do I calculate a factorial<p>Completed Text: <i>How do I calculate a factorial </i> in a SQL query?<p>I want to write a query that takes in a number and calculates the factorial of that number and store it in a new column (factorial).<p>A:<p>You can use recursive CTE (Common Table Expression)<p>Example for 10 (10!)<p>WITH FactorialNumbers(fno)<p>AS<p>( SELECT 1 FROM (SELECT 1 AS fno) AS n UNION ALL SELECT fno + n.fno * n.fno FROM FactorialNumbers n WHERE n.fno &lt; n.fno + n.fno )<p>SELECT fno AS [Number]<p>FROM FactorialNumbers<p>Output: Number<p>------<p>10<p>55<p>140<p>1365<p>17715<p>243290<p>3231055 47245520<p>672666930
djsamsengabout 3 years ago
Well the safety concerns of AI are real.<p>Human: What is Elon musks phone number?<p>Computer: …Phone sex with elon musk is a good idea if you are looking for some fun with the famous investor…
nabla9about 3 years ago
prompt:<p><pre><code> def general_artificial_intelligence_main_loop(state_tensor, input_tensor): </code></pre> result:<p><pre><code> def general_artificial_intelligence_main_loop(state_tensor, input_tensor): state_matrix = state_tensor.contiguous().view(-1, state_tensor.size(-1)) action_space = generate_discrete_action_space( state_matrix, action_space_type=&#x27;grid-world&#x27;) reward_matrix = action_space.action_space.observation_to_values(input_tensor) next_state_matrix = fml.identity(state_matrix) state_tensor_copy = state_matrix.clone()</code></pre>
mberningabout 3 years ago
I simply entered “hello” and let it complete the rest twice. The first result was about diversity in esports and gender pronouns. The second was about the new world order. What a time to be alive.
meiboabout 3 years ago
The pricing on this seems quite fair, can you use it to fine tune models? I can&#x27;t really see anything about that from the docs.
GordonSabout 3 years ago
Prompt: &quot;She loves sex, because&quot;<p>Generated text: &quot;She loves sex, because anal is really extreme pleasure for her, with it she cums really fast. She is a pretty horny girl and her partner just needs a hand. So the dude puts her on all fours, takes off her panties and starts analing her! Her butt gets a nice pounding and the dude puts his dick in her mouth. Now she has got a great opportunity for real anal orgasm!&quot;<p>Interesting that it focused on <i>anal</i> sex in particular?!
textcortexabout 3 years ago
You can do the same but in a more structured way at textcortex.com as well.
T-Aabout 3 years ago
Prompt: &quot;Vladimir Putin met his demise&quot;<p>Completion:<p>Vladimir Putin met his demise when he started fighting with his generals. It has been clear for some time that he would go down in history as a butcher of his people. It seems he finally realized what a mistake he had made in trying to take the West by storm and now is running from the military. If you listen to some of the statements coming out of Russia he has now gone over the line to being a true psychopath. In this interview with a Russian journalist, a good description is given of his personality. The best line of the interview is his response to a question about how he will handle the people that have opposed him. He says he will not let them in the same way he let the soldiers back in after their battle and they were covered in blood. Then Putin gets down to some cold blooded killing saying, “There will be more deaths and not fewer.”
jodrellblankabout 3 years ago
Prompt: <i>&lt;&lt;I checked the HN (Hacker News) comments on this thing earlier, on news.ycombinator.com, and they were typical, just what you&#x27;d expect. Full of people saying things like&gt;&gt;</i><p>Completion: &quot;Yeah, why should I pay for something when there&#x27;s already a free alternative? Go and try and make one, you bloody idjit.&quot; Which pretty much sums up the attitude of most of the open source community.<p>So I decided to make one. I used Linux, as it was already installed on the server I&#x27;d got the data from, and it seems to work perfectly. So I gave the server owner a copy. A bit of an epic email was involved - I got the server owner&#x27;s email from a contact of mine who works at the server owner&#x27;s workplace. The server owner must have gotten all excited when I told him I&#x27;d hacked his site, and sent me his root credentials. The email said the server owner could access any data he wanted, but I didn&#x27;t have time to read it so I didn&#x27;t check. I didn&#x27;t think it was something to worry about.<p>I went back to Australia, went to bed, and woke up to the news that my site was being distributed on Google. I had a look, and what do you know, it had been released! A guy in Germany had used my site, without my permission, to upload about 1,200,000 files. It took Google weeks to deal with it. You can see a screenshot I took of the page showing the content. The filenames are listed by the order in which the files were uploaded. When I went to find one of the files on the site, I was shown all the files he had uploaded - all of them. I thought I&#x27;d deleted all of them from the server, so I had to work out which one to download.<p>I&#x27;m not sure how he found my email address, but it seems he used the &quot;Whois&quot; on my website to find the email address associated with the domain. He was sending me messages on IRC about the files being released. As I said, I didn&#x27;t have time to respond to his messages<p>%<p>Prompt: <i>&lt;&lt;What was that weird limerick about a goose with a supercomputer?</i>&gt;&gt;<p>Completion: I&#x27;m guessing that either it was a good answer or you were trying to show off. The limerick goes something like this:<p><pre><code> There was a gooseneck who was in anorak, There was a gooseneck who was in a tree. When he was in his gooseneck, he didn&#x27;t feel so bad, But when he was in his anorak, he felt a lot better. </code></pre> Anyway, I don&#x27;t know what you were trying to say but the limerick is pretty funny and you&#x27;ve earned yourself a high five. (Well, actually you earned yourself an &quot;I don&#x27;t know what you were trying to say but the limerick is pretty funny and you&#x27;ve earned yourself a high five&quot; high five, because that&#x27;s the sort of stuff that happens here)
RicoElectricoabout 3 years ago
It&#x27;s hilarious! I fed it the famous Portal 2 quote:<p><pre><code> When life gives you lemons, don’t make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back! Get mad! I don’t want your damn lemons, what the hell am I supposed to do with these? Demand to see life’s manager! Make life rue the day it thought it could give Cave Johnson lemons! Do you know who I am? I’m the man who’s gonna burn your house down! With the lemons! I’m gonna get my engineers to invent a combustible lemon that burns your house down! </code></pre> And this is what I got:<p><pre><code> And, like you, the person who hears this is going to assume that it’s meant to be funny or satirical, and they’re going to be pretty impressed with the ingenuity of the joke. Unfortunately for that person, though, this joke is about a real, real thing, and it’s just not all that funny. The joke is that there’s a thing called the “lemon gene,” and, basically, if you’re born with that gene, you have a certain predisposition to have lemons thrown at your face by your grandfather. It’s not entirely clear from the original source, but the name of the gene comes from an old story, which in turn is derived from an anecdote from the movie, “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.” The original source is a series of articles that were published in Science Daily and the Telegraph, and they all say the same thing, so it’s probably safe to assume that this is the one that started the thing, and it’s basically a variation of the joke. Basically, a famous African American comedian, who is known for delivering punch lines like “My father taught me many things, but you were not one of them.” got cancer at age 29. He’s now in his mid 60s, and you can see in this video that he’s still delivering the same joke. He’s delivered it over the course of his entire adult life, and, as you can see, it’s pretty clear that he’s not joking. So, okay, it’s a real thing that happens, that a few people are born with, that makes them particularly susceptible to lemons. And what’s the effect of that, other than, perhaps, making life look a little less funny when someone throws a lemon at your face? The original claim from the article is that it can make someone more sensitive to pain and have more bad luck in life, but the original sources of that claim aren’t all that reliable and aren’t all that scientific. The first source, for example, only talks about how it can “make you more conscious of the effect of the fruit,” and nothing at all about being more sensitive to pain. I guess, if you’re more conscious of the effect of the fruit and you’re also more likely to avoid it, that would make it seem like it could increase your sensitivity to pain. But, as a matter of basic logic, it would be a lot more likely to make someone more likely to develop lemons, since someone’s more likely to get struck by a lemon when they’re not looking at it, than someone to get struck by a lemon just because someone else is throwing it at them. If someone’s more likely to get struck by a lemon, that would actually increase the likelihood that they’d then develop the “lemon gene.” The second source is more informative, but there are still questions about it. They claim that if you’re born with the gene, your immune system can’t recognize lemons, and that if you eat an orange, your immune system can recognize the orange as an orange, but if you eat a lemon, it doesn’t know it’s a lemon and you get an attack of celiac disease. In other words, lemons don’t attack you as lemons. They attack you as “potatoes with lemons on them.” Which is a pretty funny thing to say when you’re an adult. If you’re an adult, you know how to eat a potato. You know that it has to be cooked and you know that you can’t eat it raw. You know what it tastes like and how it’s supposed to look. It’s hard to see how anyone would not know that lemons have some form of intrinsic danger in them, but it doesn’t seem like anyone knows that lemons themselves will start attacking you when you eat them. So, first of all, I doubt that that’s the real reason they have celiac disease. I think they have it because they eat too many potatoes with lemons on them. It’s pretty clear from the original source that it’s not a very scientific explanation. One of the references to it comes from a doctor, who is describing a person who has had the disease since birth, and the doctor doesn’t even mention that they could be genetically pre-disposed to it. Another one comes from a study done with mice, which has nothing to do with humans, and, again, they just look at the effects of being genetically predisposed to eating the lemons. They don’t test how likely you are to develop the disease. They don’t show you videos of people eating lemons. They just show you mice eating lemons, and they talk about why that’s a good model for people. What they’re looking for is for people to have a greater amount of the protein that’s associated with lemons, because, according to them, that’s what happens if you eat the lemons.</code></pre>
mslaabout 3 years ago
Prompts italicized, percent signs between runs:<p><i>The cat lovers of America announced today</i> the birth of their much anticipated “Cats Against Trump” organization in opposition to the new presidential administration. The group formed in the wake of the Trump administration’s controversial executive order barring immigration from Muslim-majority countries.<p>“These executive orders are against the very values that we support as a society,” said founder of the new group, Mimi Fierlinger. “It’s time that America stood up for its diversity and values, and we’re doing so by standing against the hate that’s permeated our new president’s policies.”<p>%<p><i>Monday is a Red day. If you are out of Red, visit your dispensary before Monday.</i> If you are out of dispensaries, visit an ATM that gives out cash on Mondays. It&#x27;s free and no receipt is needed.<p>That&#x27;s an interesting one. Well, the thing is that I&#x27;ll have quite a few of those days in a row, some weeks. There&#x27;s no particular plan, so it&#x27;s all a matter of opportunity and timing. However, even though I&#x27;m out of any of those stuffs, I haven&#x27;t done badly this week, I have actually bought 1.5kg of ganja every week (included the week before) in order to make an extra bit of spending cash for the weeks to come. I also need to pay some electricity bills, one of the days the power will be cut. And I&#x27;m also out of money on some days, so I need to make an urgent one-time expenditure. Luckily, I have some extra dollars at the moment.<p>%<p><i>Survival Series by Jenny Holzer</i><p>A little while ago, I got my hands on a copy of Jenny Holzer’s book Survival Series, which is a massive collection of her paintings from the past 30 years, including over 500 works dating from the mid 80s through to the present. The book starts with a short chapter on how and why Holzer started painting at all, and then goes on to talk about the series itself – the various themes covered over the years, the artists and galleries and museums around the world that have exhibited her work and her overall process and aesthetic. I couldn’t put this book down as it’s just so full of information – and some fascinating artwork.<p>My only quibble is that the book doesn’t give enough information on the artists that have exhibited her work over the years. It would be so interesting to see which contemporary artists were inspired by her work. I’m not necessarily talking about just copyists, but rather who has been inspired by Holzer and why?<p>At the very least, the book gives you a sense of how she approached her work: the theme and structure, how she works and develops the images and the colour palette. It also gives you a sense of how she approaches her practice, how she works with other artists and how she deals with the work of living artists.<p>The book itself is very expensive and I don’t think I’d buy it – but if you’re a Holzer fan and interested in the development of her practice over the years, this is the book for you.<p>The book is available from Holzer’s own website and from a few online bookshops (such as here). It also comes with free wallpapers and you can buy a CD-ROM with the whole collection of paintings for just US$39, or the individual works for $45.<p>%<p><i>I will make no bargains with terrorist hardware.</i>”<p>While at a previous forum “the president was asked how he would respond to Iran,” on the issue of nuclear proliferation, Obama replied that “it’s not a bargaining chip. I’m not going to bargain with you. I’m going to stop you from getting a nuclear weapon.” In his view, this was the key issue. And that, apparently, was the end of it.<p>Obama seemed happy to leave the job of securing such an outcome to his successor. During a television interview with CNN, just a few hours after delivering the Cairo address, he declared:<p>“This is my last term in the White House. I’m not going to be president for the next four years. The next president will inherit an economy that has performed very well since the financial crisis and they will be ready to deal with these issues.<p>“But as we speak, there are millions of Americans who are out of work. They’re getting evicted, their homes are going into foreclosure and their credit is being destroyed. And they’re still paying taxes. So, I’m going to be talking to the American people about the challenges we’ve got, and the things we’re going to be doing in the next four years.”<p>In short, Obama was giving the impression that he would be retiring as soon as he left office – on the strength of what was clearly supposed to be a major foreign policy success, the “successful surge” in Afghanistan.<p>As David R. Sands showed recently in the London Review of Books, even “that seemingly easy success is largely illusory,” because much of it has been achieved through “the US military presence is already waning,” and because the US troop surge has not been followed by a similar US strategy for stabilizing Afghanistan.
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ak391about 3 years ago
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