

One of my undergrad professors said that they look as such because I, V and X can be easily marked using axes.
One of my undergrad professors said that they look as such because I, V and X can be easily marked using axes.
Perhaps it’s not exactly equivalent since this is an LLM, but from what I’ve learnt in my undergrad machine learning course, shouldn’t the test data be separate from the training data?
The train-test (or train-validate-test) split was one of the first few things we learnt to do.
Otherwise, the model can easily get a 100% accuracy (or whatever relevant metric) simply by regurgitating training data, which looks like the case here.
JUST LIKE EMAIL YOU NITWIT!
We have very different perceptions of how people approach emails.
Guess how tech illiterates(?) approach email? They sign up on Gmail - perhaps with some handholding - and that’s it. That’s all they know or care about.
And before you say they don’t deserve to be on the internet: they are all using Facebook, Youtube, Whatsapp, etc. Unless platforms like Lemmy actually treat new users better, there’s not much incentive for people to switch.
We don’t want to send everyone to the same instance otherwise it’ll end up becoming dominant (see Lemmy World)
Based on what I’ve learnt in network science, I’ve got bad news for you: real-world networks tend to follow power-law distributions.
Lemmy, being a social network, is unlikely to be an exception. Some instances are going to become hubs and the rest would be peripheral.
unique interest or theme will determine the type and feel of content in your local feed
Then selection of interests and themes should be included in the onboarding process, instead of the mumbo-jumbo about choosing instances.
So, fight club but on the internet.
It’s not just you. Perhaps it depends on the distro?
I just had to click around a little when setting up Ubuntu 22.04 and it’s done.