calcopiritus

joined 2 years ago
[–] calcopiritus@lemmy.world 5 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

First of all, I'm going to replace AI with LLM, since that's probably what you meant.

There are 2 distinct questions asked in this post:

  1. Why not use LLMs to provide different levels of automation? (Like, manual, medium, auto)

Answer: you don't need LLMs for that. You can just code it in like any other feature. It's not particularly hard, game developers know how to do it since they are used to programming automation for NPCs.

  1. Why not use LLMs to procedurally generate NPC dialogue?

Answer: games are primarily a form of art. NPC dialogues are written with a purpose. Different characters have different personalities. Some dialogues are meant to drive the plot. Other dialogues are meant to teach the player how to play. Others are meant to show the player things that they may have missed, or things that are interesting.

Procedural dialogues removes all the control from artists. They would all be generic npc n#473, with the "personality" of the LLM, maybe slightly varied if the developer writes a different prompt for each character.

Procedural dialogues would have the same issues as procedural world generation or photorealistic graphics, it would just not be interesting.

There is a practically infinite amount of Minecraft worlds, yet they all feel the same way. The thing that differentiates a Minecraft world from another is that which the player has built. The only part of the world that wasn't procedurally generated.

There is a great amount of photorealistic games. And they all look very similar. You may only distinguish one from another by looking at their handcrafted worlds or their handcrafted characters. But not by staring at a wall. You can stare at a wall in non-photoreslistic games and know what game it is.

So if you put procedurally generated dialogues, no one will read them, since you'll be bored by the time you read the same thing being said by 5 different NPCs from 5 different games.

[–] calcopiritus@lemmy.world 6 points 2 days ago

Because the British empire was absolutely huge. Which lead to many countries having English as an official language. Which means those countries would conduct trade in English. Followed by American dominance, which also has English as its main language.

And that American dominance includes dominance in media, especially films because of hollywood. Technical documents, research and especially computer-related technical documents are mainly in English for the same reason.

Sure, English is not that hard of a language. But it's not the easiest either.

[–] calcopiritus@lemmy.world 1 points 2 days ago

It didn't make me repeat the curriculum. The curriculum is the same for everyone.

I didn't use basque outside school, but I barely used English. Inside school, it was ~7 hours every day of basque. And ~3h per week of english.

[–] calcopiritus@lemmy.world 4 points 2 days ago (2 children)

Not research, personal experience:

Even after many years of school/high-school in basque, I learnt it at a way slower rate than English, which was just 1 subject.

I didn't speak neither basque nor English outside school. At most, the difference might be that I consumed a little bit of media in English while none in basque. But all subjects except spanish and English were in basque, so that should make up for the difference.

And I don't think it's just a me thing. Since the curriculum has mostly been the same for all those years of school:

Learn how to say a verb.

That's it. Many years of school just to say verbs correctly.

The exams where mostly just fill in the blank exercises, where the blank was a verb.

I still don't know how to say verbs that aren't the simplest ones.

So to your question I'd say yes. Even though neither are my native tongue, I learnt both since I entered school, but learned them at wildly different rates.

[–] calcopiritus@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

This is important to me. More than "time until login" I'd prefer "time until queue". I want to login before walking away because I want to open certain programs. So if an OS allows me to tell it "after you boot up, open these 3 programs" but hasn't completely booted up, I would prefer it to one that only lets you open programs once it has booted.

And no, configuring so it opens the same programs at startup doesn't count. I wanna choose every time I turn on the computer.

[–] calcopiritus@lemmy.world -2 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

It's 1 day every 4 years (2 including midterms). Even if the nearest polling place is 1 hour drive away. Even if your vote won't be the deciding vote. In my country it takes less than 10 minutes to vote, but lets say it is 2 hours in the USA. That is a total of 4 hours.

If 1/3 of US-Americans are not willing to "lose" 4 hours every 4 years. And 1/3 of USAmericans directly vote for fascism. Then a majority of USAmericans are ok with fascism.

[–] calcopiritus@lemmy.world 26 points 3 weeks ago (6 children)

And the other 1/3 didn't mind trump enough to vote. So yes, it is the majority of American people.

[–] calcopiritus@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

Someone on Microsoft probably needed an excuse for their pay increase.

"I rebuilt/had the idea to rebuilt the taskbar" sounds a lot better to managers than "I maintained the taskbar".

[–] calcopiritus@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

One of the techniques I've seen it's like a "password". So for example if you write a lot the phrase "aunt bridge sold the orangutan potatoes" and then a bunch of nonsense after that, then you're likely the only source of that phrase. So it learns that after that phrase, it has to write nonsense.

I don't see how this would be very useful, since then it wouldn't say the phrase in the first place, so the poison wouldn't be triggered.

EDIT: maybe it could be like a building process. You have to also put "aunt bridge" together many times, then "bridge sold" and so on, so every time it writes "aunt", it has a chance to fall into the next trap, untill it reaches absolute nonsense.

[–] calcopiritus@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

the shape of the gap is almost the same as the peak in "other". So that peak is probably "windows but we messed up with data collection" or "some browser in windows changed its user agent".

[–] calcopiritus@lemmy.world 5 points 1 month ago

How dare they collect data and display it in an accurate manner! They should just start by putting Linux at 50% and then move the lines a little bit.

[–] calcopiritus@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

Just need a bit of propaganda. If half of Americans were convinces trump is a good president (the best even!), they can be convinced that invading Europe is a great idea.

Just tell them that wokeness has invaded Europe and they need being saved by the US.

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