@indianspeedster@valigo That's the point, Karpathy used to be a very respectable guy.
He is a complete clown today. A dumb joke, making money as a grifter.
@suraj_sharma14 This is nowhere close to (modern) historic lows, and it's nowhere near the type of pivots this market has required. Yet we have a full X-timeline of worry and whining.
@jon3k@forgebitz Increase. Again, it's not a paradox. It would make the activity more valuable.
But we do not have those results yet. We do have a revolutionary type of search and can hope it will lead to a big leap in producivity, but so far it does not show any outsized effects like that.
@jon3k@forgebitz But that isn't a paradox, its a trivial consequence. And it doesn't even make sense to ever describe demand for turing complete output as inelastic.
@jon3k@forgebitz Ironically "Jevons paradox" (which is no paradox at all) is less in play since these tools so far haven't reduced cost/raised productivity in such a meaningful way. The paradox (which is no paradox) doesn't work on hypothetical potential.
@manonginusa@d4m1n Its a very normal cycle, with an abnormal transient around covid. Handing out well paying jobs to lazy idiots only happens at temporary peaks, its never sustainable (we're not even close to the 2000 dip yet, this is more like 2010).
@benglickenhaus@zeeg Almost everyone with normal intelligence and normal experience could build almost everything before LLM. There was (and is) a difference in *how* it's built, which has HUGE consequences for e.g. lifecycle cost and marginal utility.
So yeah, this is on you.
@brankopetric00 Second time I've seen you say this without motivation.
If you're a centralized team responsible for large-scale enterprise infra, arguably Azure > AWS
@paularambles You have *no* idea how high the income taxes are in Sweden.
And fwiw; cheap but not free child care, 18 months parental leave *without the salary* (its capped extremely low). Biggest cost of university is opportunity cost.
@AFDudley0 Even ignoring everything else money comes with a burden of management (that is, even ignoring that you probably buy more things that need even more management)
So no.