I guessed many words I didn't know on Wordle (not a native English speaker), if you are able to reduce enough the letters search space there's going to be only a few options that e.g. make sense phonetically.
I actually misread the original comment but I guess my question is still somewhat relevant so leaving it as it is. You're right that it's easier to just bruteforce it in Wordle.
This was my problem too. If there was a scoring system, it might make sense to buy letters against your score, to help you forward once you're stuck. I got stuck. What the heck goes between Volatile and Vole?
Sure, lower levels will change, but instead of the chaos above they’ll just continue to simulate upper levels in perfect order (even if different).
Edit: putting some effort to be more precise (though I may be on the wrong track): since the period of the pattern is 35328, it depends at which tick we introduce the change. Since we're changing a cell at a certain level N it makes sense to consider tick 1 out of 35328 for level N-1 (zooming in).
If we introduce a change at any other tick (out of the 35328), what we are really doing is a big change in level N-1 rather than a single cell change in level N.
I dont think thats correct. Any change on a lower level will effect the greater cell.
Each cells behavior is the composition of all its lower cells after all.
Im sure there are various compositions that lead to the same outcome, so it should be possible for each cell to be something else, but most changes would change the greater cell. For an easy example image a cell turned from on to off at 2x slower than normal.
Lately I've been experimenting the usage of LLMs for the explainability of SQL stored procedures with exceptionally good results - think about identifying important fields, linking them to existing glossaries, expanding said glossaries, etc.
I wonder how much SQL looking like natural language helped for my use case.
In Italy we definitely often use "campo da calcio" as a quick measurement unit for areas. I'm guessing that's due to the fact that for most people using squared meters is really limited to measuring housing areas and other few use cases, so reverting to something that everybody knows well (a football field) is much more effective. For distances, everybody is very comfortable using all powers of 10 of the meter for all kind of purposes so there's no need to use references to real world measurements.
France has been experimenting a 4-day week for primary school since the 80s [1], generally with a day-off on Wednesdays. The impacts are certainly there, e.g. "before September 2013, more than 40% of mothers whose youngest child was of elementary school age did not work on Wednesdays".
It sounds like a 4-day school week would be the natural consequence of a global 4-day working week.
Asking it to “explain how GPS works like I’m a seasoned engineer” yields a more detailed explanation and there’s no mention of GPS terminals sending messages back to the satellites.
Probably the “false output” you mentioned is due to the fact that the prompt asked to “explain it like I’m five”, which made ChatGPT answer with a “dialogue between terminal and satellite” explanation, which (arguably) may be better understood by a 5 years old.
Being not very good with numbers is one of the limitations of the current model. I imagine that in the future we will see integrations with a number of different tools to overcome these limits - WolframAlpha being the first one that comes to mind when talking about algebra and calculus.
I guess that the story is already quite explicit as it is: simply recalling all that amount of details is a clear indicator of how much the time slowed down for the gp during the event.
The Roma Tre University has a research project named In Codice Ratio. One of its objectives is to transcribe through AI and OCR the whole Vatican Secret Archives - one of the biggest collection of manuscripts, some of them more than a thousand years old.
The fact that older manuscript collections will have multiple texts in a single codex or scroll with little annotation to the existence of these further texts makes even generating a list of what’s in the collection a challenge. This gives me some hope that a complete catalog of the Vatican Secret¹ Archives might exist in my lifetime.
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1. “Secret,” here, does not mean what you might assume, but rather refers to the fact that the archive belongs to the Pope personally and not some department of the curia.