lebaux's comments

lebaux | 2 years ago | on: New theory suggests LLMs can understand text

Hah, you would not believe it, but I am planning to use LLM to solve math problems by training it on the posts of my blog. Of course, my blog is silly nonsense, but it will be a fun exercise and address the elephant in the room as well. We will see what results we get for some fun prompts!

lebaux | 2 years ago | on: Collision Detection (2015)

I ask this because I speculate that I discovered "new math". It is unlikely, because I failed math in school, but I dared to imagine 0=1 like many others. But the complete line of math I am trying to prove is -1=1=0=∞. It does sound crazy, I know. But I honestly think this line of math is what separates us from actual, working fusion. Of course, I realize how insane I sound, and that is why I am looking for ways to probe my hypothesis. I think I am getting closer, but literally every single person I talked to about this told me I should visit a psychiatrist :')

lebaux | 2 years ago | on: Collision Detection (2015)

This is super interesting, what further reading would you recommend for a complete beginner in collision detection? Thank you.

lebaux | 2 years ago | on: The Curse of the Excluded Middle (2014)

Sorry for dumb question, but can someone please explain to a non-programmer, why the author made the title "The Curse of the Excluded Middle"? What is so special about "middle"? What is middle in programming?

I am a fairly dumb person, but I am lately super interested in 1=0 math paradox/proof and it just occurred to me, what is the middle of rational numbers? What is the middle of irrational numbers? To me, it feels like the middle of all numbers is 0, but if irrational numbers are not considered "real", it can't be 0.

These 2 things are probably wildly unrelated, but I would appreciate any explanation of the linked blog post in the simplest terms. Thank you!

lebaux | 2 years ago | on: Commit to competence in this coming year

From the blog:

> I love that loop. Write, revise, write, revise. It’s like doing reps in a gym. You can’t expect that 10 pull-ups will add any discernible new muscle. But 30 pull-ups, across three sets, done thrice a week, for a year? Yeah, you’re going to notice the cumulative results of that.

I started working on my loop a couple of days ago, incidentally. I am not a programmer and loop is a concept I believe can work outside of programming. Everywhere.

I even made a dedicated page on by blog called the loop :) But my main inspiration was Ma.tt.

Great read!

lebaux | 3 years ago | on: The 5% Rule

i likked this rule as one as the 80/20 and tested it with all the other possible tests
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