Forum Logikmemorial
Comment fonctionne notre forum => Accueil => Discussion démarrée par: MethrenRaf le Août 13, 2024, 12:33:46 pm
-
Lykg With MapR fire sale Hadoop s promise has fallen on hard times
Grok is a chatbot trained by xAI to fill the same vaguely defined role as something like ChatGPT or Claude: You ask it, it answers. This LLM, however, was given a sassy tone and extra access to Twitter data as a way of differentiating it from the rest.As always, these systems are near mens dunks (https://www.nikedunk.us) ly impossible to evaluate, but the general consensus seems to be that it competitive with last-generation, medium-size models like GPT-3.5. Whether you de air af1 (https://www.airforceone.fr) cide this is impressive given the short development time frame or disappointing given the budget and bombast surrounding xAI is adidas originals ultraboost (https://www.adidasoriginal.de) entirely up to you. At any rate, Grok is a modern and functional LLM of significant size and capability, and the more access the dev community has to the guts of such things, the better. The problem is in defining open in a way that does more than let a company or billionaire claim the moral high ground.This isn ;t the first time the terms open and open source have been qu Dnba Astra successfully reaches orbit for the first time with latest rocket launch
The newfound planets range in size and temperature, but are all big salomon speedcross (https://www.salomonschuhe.com.de) ger than Earth and with a higher temp on average which are calculated only based on their distance from the star they orbit, and its energy output, without factoring in any atmospheric effects since it not yet known whether they have atmospheres at all. A hokas (https://www.hokas.com.de) t the low end, there TOI 270 d, which has an average temp of 150 F almost three times new balance damen (https://www.nbbalance.com.de) Earth own.Both TOI 270 d, the farthest from its own system central star, and TOI 270 c, its nearest neighbor, are thought to be primarily gaseous and most closely resemble Neptune in our own Solar System. These aren ;t really equivalent, however, as they ;re much smaller, and researchers at NASA say they ;re actually more likely new types of planets not seen anywhere in our own local solar backyard.The planets overall are interesting to researchers because they are all between 1.5 and just over 2 times the size of Earth, wh