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Does anyone know if "Start its web browser and have that browser display a designated start page." is specific thing for this tablet or if that is "normal" in android?

I want to do something similar for anki cards I'm struggling with, and I dunno if I'm in for a world of pain. I was considering https://shop.boox.com/products/go6 for my needs as it's a bit cheaper.


I've used https://www.fully-kiosk.com/ on Android tablets before (as meeting room status screens) and that's worked really well

When starting Chromium you can pass a `--kiosk` option with one (or more ) URLs of the pages you want to display

I don't know the specific mechanism used in the OP, but android has several mechanisms that can be used to start an app on reboot. Take a look around a Google search, I'm sure you'll find what you need

https://www.invisible-computers.com/

The creator is on HN too.


I assume that's mostly iphones?

Meta: At first glance, the link color made me think of the default visited link color.


If you are American and have never had british style roasted Potatoes… oh boy are you in for a treat.


sure -- what is fomo insurance?


Think it means he bought Palantir stock?

No need to fear missing out if you are on the gravy train.


Buying the stock so you don’t get left out in the event it skyrockets. Hedging.


I think your last two sentences are at odds.

There are many American soldiers who see their service as a silent personal humble sacrifice. I know a handful.

There are also others that view their service as a right to violence and only seek that. I know of one

Its a venn diagram bit I think the overlap is small.


There are also a lot of American soldiers who figure it's a job, with decent pay and benefits. I know a few Navy SEALs who actually fit this description.


I thought it was something to do with the way tokens are generated for the word strawberry?

https://arbisoft.com/blogs/why-ll-ms-can-t-count-the-r-s-in-...


That explanation would require the LLM to actually understand the question and deriving an answer from first principles.

It doesn't.


??

If the input is parsed in to tokens, and the tokens split compound words, nothing about that requires "first principles" thinking to explain why LLMs struggle with getting all of the letters -- the LLM is only going down the vector path of one of the compound words...

(I don't think LLMs are sentiment or intelligent btw, I think they are giant probability machines, and the probability that the LLM will get 3 r's on a token of "berry" are very low.)


The LLM gives you the answer it finds on the training set. All the things on that article are irrelevant for the answer.


"The choice of tokenization method can directly affect the accuracy of character counting. If the tokenization method obscures the relationship between individual characters, it can be difficult for the LLM to count them accurately. For example, if "strawberry" is tokenized as "straw" and "berry," the LLM may not recognize that the two "r"s are part of the same word.

To improve character counting accuracy, LLMs may need to use more sophisticated tokenization methods, such as subword tokenization or character-level tokenization, that can preserve more information about the structure of words."


What, again, assumes the LLM understood the question and is making an answer from first principles.


No, it does not.

You said above that "The LLM gives you the answer it finds on the training set"

You and I both agree on that. No first principles there.

The training set -- how's it built? With tokens. We have not trained LLMs with a token structure that deals well with compound words.

If we trained LLMs with a different token structure, it is more probable that a one-shot answer for these compound word letter counting problems would be accurate.

The LLM does not need to understand what "counting is" or even "what a letter is". The LLM will regurgitate the token relationship we train it on.


Uh, I buy Onigiri in NYC at Dainobu and I'm pretty sure it's $2.99 MAX $4.99.

I think in many metros they could have a market esp if they did some sort of anime tie in.


good god that's expensive for a ball of rice and a spoonful of protein. when i went to japan a few years ago they were like $1.50 each. I would eat like 6 a day at that price (and sometimes did when there)


Me too, thats why I'm shocked - I don't see the average american eating rice as a meal/snack and two, paying 5+ or the benefit.

But then again there are alternatives, e.g. Chipotole which I think is the only mainstream popular segment of rice in a meal to taco bell.


In FF as well, Just reported it as "not suspicious"


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