The Wikipedia editors who hang out here might thank you for calling to their attention pages that clearly need to be fixed, since they cite non-peer-reviewed preprints on the arXiv, the shit journal Entropy, and the fucking LessWrong blog.
(i vaguely remember that somebody allegedly important in machine learning started doing just that, that is outputting multiple preprints and leaving it at that stage instead of pushing normal papers, but can’t remember who)
‘planes could not fly’ is some sort of weird pro AI argument. It is the ‘we are still early’ or ‘people were also against the internet when it still arrived’ made famous by cryptocurrencies.
Who said planes would never fly ? …see also :
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Q-learning
&
State–action–reward–state–action
The Wikipedia editors who hang out here might thank you for calling to their attention pages that clearly need to be fixed, since they cite non-peer-reviewed preprints on the arXiv, the shit journal Entropy, and the fucking LessWrong blog.
Me, I’m going to block you anyway. Bye!
don’t you know, the field moves so fast that preprints are just as good as articles and requiring actual scrutiny just stifles SV innovation
(i vaguely remember that somebody allegedly important in machine learning started doing just that, that is outputting multiple preprints and leaving it at that stage instead of pushing normal papers, but can’t remember who)
They also said that the Earth doesn’t have a 4 corner simultaneous 4-day TIME CUBE!
did you have a point?
‘planes could not fly’ is some sort of weird pro AI argument. It is the ‘we are still early’ or ‘people were also against the internet when it still arrived’ made famous by cryptocurrencies.
Check this out: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epistemology
Epistemic Status: rekt