If by people you mean me, then I wasn't clear enough in my comment. The example given implied an image without any objects the GP was talking about, just a uniform texture.
I just checked it out right quick. It works perfectly well on an AMD card with ROCM pytorch.
It seems decent in short bursts. If it quite quickly loses detail, and the weapon has a tendency to devolve into colorful garbage. I would also like to point out that none of the videos show what happens when you walk into a wall. It doesn't handle it very gracefully.
So, effectively, these video game models are proof-of-concepts to say “we can make models with extremely accurate predictions using minimal resources”?
I really really hate that kind of articles with 1 million lines of semi useless historical crap to read to finally have the explanation of the title question hidden somewhere near the end in the way of a "by the way"
Tldr:
That was the environment in which PepsiCo concluded the deal that delivered the Pepsi navy. The ruble was still worthless internationally, and Stolichnaya’s growth prospects were more limited than in 1972, so enlarging Pepsi’s sales in the USSR meant turning to new sources of revenue.
...The novelty of the submarine trade grabbed headlines even at the time, but PepsiCo never even took possession of the watercraft.
...PepsiCo was just the middleman for the vessels bound for the scrap heap, which went to a Norwegian ship-breaker instead.
I get where they're coming from as excellence does require grinding - the idea of a 3 week bootcamp into mastery (of anything) is a pure sales pitch; on the flip side the grind's a means to an end, usually, and I am doubtful that goal is "become indentured to a company" when they've just built up the skills to found one.
> How many mammals have babies that require basically continuous care for years before they can be remotely self sufficient?
All great apes. I'm not drawing conclusion based on other animals, anyway. I'm looking at humans. It's just interesting to note we're not alone amongst mammals when it comes to polygamy.
There is huge potential in software for the education sector. Maybe you can spark your love for programming again by finding an idea that combines your love for music, gamedev, and teaching/education?
The next step to create training data is a real human with a bodycam. There is only the need to connect the real body movement (step forward, turning left, etc) to typical keyboard and mouse game control events, to feed them into the model, too.
I think that is what the devs here are dreaming about.
Where are you getting this data from? Nicotine is an appetite suppressant but so is caffeine. I find it hard to believe that smoking alone is the reason for the difference.
A Zen 5 core has four parallel AVX-512 execution units, so it should be able to execute 128 16-bit operations in parallel, or over 24k on 192 cores. However I think the 192-core processors use the compact variant core Zen 5c, and I'm not sure if Zen 5c is quite as capable as the full Zen 5 core.
It's more likely having a specific immediate use case - creating his videos - was more important. Usually creating something for some abstract future use(r) will lead to almost zero motivation, at least for me.
NVIDIA's RTX Remix [1] suite of tools already does that. It doesn't require any model training or dozens of hours of pre-recorded gameplay either.
You can drop in low-res textures and have AI tools upscale them. Models can be replaced, as well as lighting and the best part: it's all under your control. You're not at the merci of obscure training material that might or might not result in a consistent look-and-feel. More knobs, more control, less compute required.
> Suggesting they're not contributing is disingenuous.
Where did I say they don't contribute? I said they don't contribute beyond their mouth
> You don't see the non-premium version of ACF as contributing?
It's a marketing strategy, first and foremost. If they didn't offer it an alternative would come, attract the crowd, and fill the void. Of course as a side effect of this strategy, they fill that void as a side effect.
Just skimmed the article but my guess is that it’s a dream type experience where if you turned around 180 and walked the other direction it wouldn’t correspond to where you just came from. More like an infinite map.
It’s not really made for tourists from outside the country, you already have special tickets for people who visit for a short time. It’s for the local population. The price hike is from 49€/month to 58€/month next year. It’s the opposite of predatory IMHO, you have it on your mobile app in a few tap and can cancel easily
Just tried it out, and no. It doesn't have any sort of "map" awareness. It's very much in the "recall/replay" category of "AI" where it seems to accurately recall stuff that is part of the training dataset, but as soon as you do something not in there (like walk into a wall), it completely freaks out and spits out gibberish. Plausible gibberish, but gibberish none the less.
I loved ready player one. It's not a classic, but it's a fun movie. I think a lot of the hatred comes from the people who have read the book (I haven't).
I don't disagree with that, but the comment I've replied to said they were stealing "what they had previously provided". The stuff "provided" was code shared under a GPL license.
Maybe it's a technicality, but the code is open source and you can do whatever you want it it, provided that you respect the GPL license.
There's a lot to criticise Matt for here, but you can't accuse him of stealing GPL code. Like, that's one of the points of that license.