https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/21/well/eat/ozempic-food-noise.html
What Is ‘Food Noise’? How Ozempic Quiets Obsessive Thinking About Food – The New York Times
June 25, 2023How to Get Rid of Bad Breath – The New York Times
June 25, 2023GPT-4 Technical Report
June 25, 2023Just stumbled on this. Amazing how well GPT-4 seems to do on AP tests. One notable exception is AP English. I wonder why?
https://twitter.com/mattgroh/status/1635755153830584321
https://cdn.openai.com/papers/gpt-4.pdf
Test results that gpt4 can get; Doesn’t do well in ap English
Integration, modularity and network analysis for understanding… – Ron Shamir – Keynote – ISMB 2022 – YouTube
June 25, 2023How to Eat Powdered Peanut Butter With Your Food
June 20, 2023Interview with Bob Young
June 20, 2023http://freesoftwaremagazine.com/articles/interview_with_bob_young/ QT:{{”
CM: In January 1998 I attended a talk you gave to the Toronto Linux user group where you noted how you hoped Red Hat would become the Heinz ketchup of Linux distributions. What did you mean by that? BY: If you give away your product it is hard to claim a lot of IP or product differentiation. In the same way that anyone can make ketchup out of freely available ingredients (tomatoes, vinegar, salt and spices) without bending a copyright rule, anyone can build a Linux distribution (Linux kernel, drivers, utilities, and applications (Apache, DNS, Postgres, etc)). So both products are what are defined in business as “commodity” products.
Heinz has 60% of the ketchup business because they have built a brand synonymous with quality and consistency. Red Hat is doing very well by this standard.
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