ChatMusician isn’t exactly new and the underlying dataset isn’t particularly diverse, but it’s one of the few models made specifically for classical music.
Are there any others, by the way?
ChatMusician isn’t exactly new and the underlying dataset isn’t particularly diverse, but it’s one of the few models made specifically for classical music.
Are there any others, by the way?
I wonder how much Beckett was inspired by this while writing Rough for Theatre II:
B: [Hurriedly.] ‘… morbidly sensitive to the opinion of others at the time, I mean as often and for as long as they entered my awareness–’ What kind of Chinese is that? A: [Nervously.] Keep going, keep going! B: ‘… for as long as they entered my awareness, and that in either case, I mean whether such on the one hand as to give me pleasure or on the contrary on the other to cause me pain, and truth to tell–’ Shit! Where’s the verb? A: What verb? B: The main! A: I give up. B: Hold on till I find the verb and to hell with all this drivel in the middle. [Reading.] ‘… were I but … could I but …’ –Jesus!–‘… though it be … be it but…’–Christ!–ah! I have it–‘… I was unfortunately incapable …’ Done it! A: How does it run now? B: [Solemnly.] ‘… morbidly sensitive to the opinion of others at the time …’–drivel drivel drivel–‘… I was unfortunately incapable–’ [The lamp goes out. Long pause.]
Both work very well for the entire journey there and back. I use the first I get my hands on (typically scale armour) and upgrade it to +8. But if it’s plate armour, you might have to start using it before gaining the necessary strength, so be ready to spend more time and food on a few levels in the prison area.
I expected that recording would be the hard part.
I think some of the open-source ones should work if your phone is rooted?
I’ve heard that Google’s phone app can record calls (though it says it aloud when starting the recording). Of course, it wouldn’t work if Google thinks it shouldn’t in your region.
By the way, Bluetooth headphones can have both speakers and a microphone. And Android can’t tell a peripheral device what it should or shouldn’t do with audio streams. Sounds like a fun DIY project if you’re into it, or maybe somebody sells these already.
Haven’t heard of all-in-one solutions, but once you have a recording, whisper.cpp can do the transcription:
The underlying Whisper models are MIT.
Then you can use any LLM inference engine, e.g. llama.cpp, and ask the model of your choice to summarise the transcript:
You can also write a small bash/python script to make the process a bit more automatic.
I enjoy xenharmonic music and modern academic music the most, but I’m not familiar with everything there, so any recommendations are welcome if you, reader, have something in your mind.
Yeah, while tripping on acid.
Interessen-Gemeinschaft Matte.
“These hills are being bombed”?
No IPA notation? ⸨I’m somewhat disappointed⸩
It would. But it’s a good option when you have computationally heavy tasks and communication is relatively light.
Once configured, Tor Hidden Services also just work (you may need to use some fresh bridges in certain countries if ISPs block Tor there though). You don’t have to trust any specific third party in this case.
Discounting temporary tech issues, I haven’t browsed internet without an adblocker for a single day in my entire life. Nobody is entitled to abuse my attention; no guilt, no exceptions.
If config prompt = system prompt, its hijacking works more often than not. The creators of a prompt injection game (https://tensortrust.ai/) have discovered that system/user roles don’t matter too much in determining the final behaviour: see appendix H in https://arxiv.org/abs/2311.01011.
Like Firefox ScreenshotGo? (I think it only supports English though)
Don’t know much of the stochastic parrot debate. Is my position a common one?
In my understanding, current language models don’t have any understanding or reflection, but the probabilistic distributions of the languages that they learn do - at least to some extent. In this sense, there’s some intelligence inherently associated with language itself, and language models are just tools that help us see more aspects of nature than we could earlier, like X-rays or a sonar, except that this part of nature is a bit closer to the world of ideas.
xkcd.com is best viewed with Netscape Navigator 4.0 or below on a Pentium 3±1 emulated in Javascript on an Apple IIGS at a screen resolution of 1024x1. Please enable your ad blockers, disable high-heat drying, and remove your device from Airplane Mode and set it to Boat Mode. For security reasons, please leave caps lock on while browsing.
CVEs are constantly found in complex software, that’s why security updates are important. If not these, it’d have been other ones a couple of weeks or months later. And government users can’t exactly opt out of security updates, even if they come with feature regressions.
You also shouldn’t keep using software with known vulnerabilities. You can find a maintained fork of Chromium with continued Manifest V2 support or choose another browser like Firefox.
You can get your hands on books3 or any other dataset that was exposed to the public at some point, but large companies have private human-filtered high-quality datasets that perform better. You’re unlikely to have the resources to do the same.
LLaMA can’t. Chameleon and similar ones can: