@viktaur27 @Teslarati The rate of improvement from original GPT to GPT-3 is impressive. If this rate of improvement continues, GPT-5 or 6 could be indistinguishable from the smartest humans. Just my opinion, not an endorsement. I left OpenAI 2 to 3 years ago. Am a neutral outsider at this point.
@katieporteroc Currently on a train from Prague to Vienna.
Total cost = $20
Total travel time = ~ 4hrs.
I couldn’t imagine paying $12 to travel 10 miles in 2025.
I enjoy the larping, but this is obviously NOT what you claim it to be.
The fact you have 200k+ followers and are blindly misinforming them is sad, and you should feel ashamed.
This video is old news and has been debunked for years. It is cgi. The unedited clips have surfaced.
Stop larping retard
@The_BERG_366@RadixMaximalist@WhiteHouse You are actually retarded. Go online and try to purchase a pair of shoes from America. There is a separate line item for the import fee.
For gov it is slightly different, but still very similar.
Here’s an example:
Let’s say we have a large batch of Postgres DB and each each DB table within DB, and row within each table has extremely fine tuned security.
Currently it is a multi week - Palantir for one has solved the data access issue. Before Palantir, it would take month to do the paperwork and get access to data (often live encrypted data from satellites or recon drones > satellites > data storage > real time provided to operators).
This data also had many many restrictions such as where it can be accessed (physically, by whom, for how long, etc).
@PalantirTech maintains this granular level of data security but also is able to provide operators/ generals with real time data (from all databases, tabkes, and rows, that are sharing those data).
This is massive because imagine you are an operator and jumping out of a helicopter in an unknown territory. The Polish might have real time data feeds on where jammmers are located, Japan has data on where soldiers are stationed, Romania has information on where large missiles are located, USA has information on things as detailed as line of sight of various munitions platforms, etc). It gets much more granular than this though - down to the types of missiles / seekers various countries have, and whether or not they can safely fly a helicopter into the area and avoid being shot down.
This base layer of knowledge is important before combat, in order to successfully plan (same with PLTR on the business / enterprise side of things).
The granular data that is provided during the mission is even more critical. For example, the operators might want to see what area are actively being jammed / GPS denied. They might want to see if their ally thermal recon drones see people overhead that they cannot see, etc - you get the point.
It is an impossible problem to properly allocate this data and security of the data, unless you have spent years and years trying to solve this one singular issue.
PLTR has solved this one issue and much more, making them decades ahead of competition.
Imagine you have a Mac, Linux, and windows PC shared among 10 people on same account.
You need to understand exactly what settings are set on each device, and who changes them. You need to understand what software is installed, documents created, docs edited, etc. all without using the internet.
This is the easiest way I can explain it for somebody too smart to be involved in enterprise ERP/CRM/SCM software. If you knew anything about enterprise software, it would immediately make sense to you.
Basically these gov and companies have data in 100 different sources (payroll, revenue management, supply chain, procurement, benefits , is an example for enterprise, diff for gov.).
They might try and consolidate it into a single data lake / warehouse, but this doesn’t actually solve any of their problems (even though they initially believe it will).
Palantir allows these companies to abstract their data away from the definitions (typically a WSDL + XSD schema for ERP/CRM, and turn it into a custom built ontology - think OWL2).
This seems trivial and useless, but it allows for companies to quickly draw connections and make informed decisions that otherwise would take a month of jumping through different systems and excel spreadsheets to actually solve.
Something as trivial as getting a list of employees with a dependent over the age of X who currently resides in X city, is an example of a problem that could literally take a month to solve due to data being spread out among different services. Palantir allows real time access to answers like these, and much much more.
This is why it’s not okay for people this extreme to have nuclear weapons.
It would be one thing (slightly more acceptable, I guess) , if they thought these things and didn’t publish it.
They are actively publishing horrible things about the death of non believers. This is not okay. These people are rabid animals.
@RadixMaximalist@WhiteHouse@grok You literally live in Switzerland why are you asking grok?
My family is Swiss and I have spent quite a lot of time there. It is so bad that people often will drive down to a bordering country like France to buy goods.