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106
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2 yr. ago
  • Yoga is correct - the average riding is 100-120k people. The smallest riding in BC currently is 89k, so unless they were going to give BC more ridings it makes sense.

    The only ridings which are significantly below that mark are:

    • Labrador, it's an entire island
    • The territories, with 1 riding each

    Labrador is perhaps debatable because Newfoundland has other ridings it could join, but I think the case for having a riding cross a strait is much weaker than splitting a city in a remote area. This is not unique to Prince George, and sharing a riding with people 600km away is just reality when you're talking about remote, sparsely populated areas.

  • Yes, you're anthropomorphizing far too much. An LLM can't understand, or recall (in the common sense of the word, i.e. have a memory), and is not aware.

    Those are all things that intelligent, thinking things do. LLMs are none of that. They are a giant black box of math that predicts text. It doesn't even understand what a word is, orthe meaning of anything it vomits out. All it knows is what is the statistically most likely text to come next, with a little randomization to add "creativity".

  • I'm quite sure the actual transaction is between private American utility companies and their counterparts across the border. There likely is a contract in place between the two companies which agrees on pricing, which would either spell out how rates are calculated, require a guaranteed warning period before rate increases, or disallow rate changes until the contract expires and is renewed.

    However, Ford isn't talking about a rate change between the companies. Even though it's not a physical good, it's cross-border trade which means it happens at the pleasure of the governments on both sides. Ford is talking about applying a tax to the electricity, which I assume his government has the power to do. Contracts between private entities cannot stop the government from levying a tax if it chooses.

  • For reference, most of Saskatchewan has been below -30 for all of February. Hit -40 on Tuesday. Finally warmed up yesterday. That's a little colder for longer than we usually get, but not by very much. Large parts of Alberta are similar.

    The central provinces have pretty extreme temperature swings between winter and summer. BC, southern Ontario and QC, and the maritimes are less extreme.

  • You're completely right, if the goal is good customer support and decent working conditions for the operators.

    It's not. The goal is like 1rre said - make people get fed up and stop trying to get their stuff fixed, just buy a new one. Oh, and they could fire half the operators too, since less people would be willing to wade through the pile of shit to talk to them.

    Money and profit, screw the rest.

  • Trudeau

  • I would actually argue that a large part of Canada's issues in this regard is leakage from our southern border. Not all of it, of course. But a large part. Media is dominated by US perspectives, including all your garbage.

  • This article and discussion is specifically about massively upscaling LLMs. Go follow the links and read OpenAI's CEO literally proposing data centers which require multiple, dedicated grid-scale nuclear reactors.

    I'm not sure what your definition of optimization and efficiency is, but that sure as heck does not fit mine.

  • No, this is the equivalent of writing off calculators if they required as much power as a city block. There are some applications for LLMs, but if they cost this much power, they're doing far more harm than good.

  • Yeah, I don't know why you're getting so many down votes. That is what Hitler's party was called, so technically Poilievre isn't lying. He's still a dumbass for seriously stating that position and purposefully spreading confusion for his own benefit, but it's technically not a lie.

  • Exactly this, and rightly so. The school's administration has a moral and legal obligation to do what it can for the safety of its students, and allowing this to continue unchecked violates both of those obligations.

  • I find it difficult to lay the blame with VSCode when the terminology belongs to git, which (even 7 years ago) was an industry standard technology.

    People using tools they don't understand and plowing ahead through scary warnings will always encounter problems.