or can read interview transcripts in much less time than listening to a podcast would take.
This always baffles me. :) Guess I'm both a slow reader and a fast listener, but for me audio allows for easily 3x as much speed as reading.
So what made you change your mind?
It's interesting how two years later, the "buy an expert's time" suggestion is almost outdated. There are still situations where it makes sense, but probably in the majority of situations any SOTA LLM will do a perfectly fine job giving useful feedback on exercises in math or language learning.
Thanks for the post!
The puzzle does not include any question or prompt. What does "try it out" mean exactly? I suppose it means "figure out how the notation works", or am I missing something? (I didn't read the rest to not get spoiled)
I guess a related pattern is the symmetric case where people talk past each other because both sides are afraid their arguments won't get heard, so they both focus on repeating their arguments and nobody really listens (or maybe they do, but not in a way that convinces the other person they really got their argument). So there, too, I agree with your advice - taking a step back and repeating the other person's viewpoint seems like the best way out of this.
Some further examples:
It certainly depends on who's arguing. I agree that some sources online see this trade-off and end up on the side of not using flags after some deliberation, and I think that's perfectly fine. But this describes only a subset of cases, and my impression is that very often (and certainly in the cases I experienced personally) it is not even acknowledged that usability, or anything else, may also be a concern that should inform the decision.
(I admit though that "perpetuates colonialism" is a spin that goes beyond "it's not a 1:1 mapping" and is more convincing to me)
This makes me wonder, how could an AI figure out whether it had conscious experience? I always used to assume that from first person perspective it's clear when you're conscious. But this is kind of circular reasoning as it assumes you have a "perspective" and are able to ponder the question. Now what does a, say, reasoning model do? If there is consciousness, how will it ever know? Does it have to solve the "easy" problem of consciousness first and apply the answer to itself?
In no particular order, because interestingness is multi-dimensional and they are probably all to some degree on my personal interesting Pareto frontier:
For a long time, I used to wonder what causes people to consistently mispronounce certain words even when they are exposed to many people pronouncing them correctly. (which mostly applies to people speaking in a non-native language, e.g. people from continental Europe speaking English)
Some examples that I’ve heard from different people around me over the years:
I did, of course, understand that if you only read a word, particularly in English where pronunciations are all over the place and often unpredictable, you may end up with a wrong assumption of how it's pronounced. This happened to me quite a lot[1]. But then, once I did hear someone pronounce it, I usually quickly learned my lesson and adapted the correct way of saying it. But still I've seen all these other people stick to their very unusual pronunciations anyway. What's up with that?[2] Naturally, it was always too awkward for me to ask them directly, so I never found out.
Recently, however, I got a rather uncomfortable insight into how this happens when a friend pointed out that I was pronouncing "dude" incorrectly, and have apparently done so for all my life, without anyone ever informing me about it, and without me noticing it.
So, as I learned now, "dude" is pronounced "dood" or "dewd". Whereas I used to say "dyood" (similar to duke). And while I found some evidence that dyood is not completely made up, it still seems to be very unusual, and something people notice when I say it.
Hence I now have the, or at least one, answer to my age-old question of how this happens. So, how did I never realize? Basically, I did realize that some people said "dood", and just took that as one of two possible ways of pronouncing that word. Kind of, like, the overly American way, or something a super chill surfer bro might say. Whenever people said "dood" (which, in my defense, didn't happen all that often in my presence[3]) I had this subtle internal reaction of wondering why they suddenly saw the need to switch to such a heavy accent for a single word.
I never quite realized that practically everyone said "dood" and I was the only "dyood" person.
So, yeah, I guess it was a bit of a trapped prior and it took some well-directed evidence to lift me out of that valley. And maybe the same is the case for many of the other people out there who are consistently mispronouncing very particular words.
But, admittedly, I still don't wanna be the one to point it out to them.
And when I lie awake at night, I wonder which other words I may be mispronouncing with nobody daring to tell me about it.
e.g., for some time I thought "biased" was pronounced "bee-ased". Or that "sesame" was pronounced "see-same". Whoops. And to this day I have a hard time remembering how "suite" is pronounced.
Of course one part of the explanation is survivorship bias. I'm much less likely to witness the cases where someone quickly corrects their wrong pronunciation upon hearing it correctly. Maybe 95% of cases end up in this bucket that remains invisible to me. But still, I found the remaining 5% rather mysterious.
Maybe they were intimidated by my confident "dyood"s I threw left and right.