Or from the other angle, when there are better forms for working in a factory. We don't make cars giant mechanical humans you sit atop of, why do the same for robots?
I'm not the most knowledgeable about LLMs, but I don't see the threat distillation is supposed to pose.
Surely what you'd get from training something on a model's outputs and reasoning chain would just get you something that sounds like that model. The model won't magically become more intelligent just because it's trained on data from a smarter model. It doesn't have the relevant vectors and mathematics, it's only got the text output. A lot of the model changes tend to be architectural than just more data these days.
At least from my layman's viewpoint, it seems very much like claiming that watching television would let someone build a better television just from what they saw. The whole fear around distillation just sounds like nonsense.
It also doesn't preclude the device using other means than IP to detect location.
It is a bit redundant when you're in the same country.
People in England don't call English muffins English muffins, and Berliners don't call Berliners Berliners, why would Australians call Australian dollars Australian Dollars, unless they needed to specify?
Ducks for short.
Rule 2: What is a context window???
Its the window through which you enviously stare at people running megatoken context windows.
Or that part of the drop isn't just from more accurate testing methods being developed and used.
It's a different tool, but for much the same end. I want to say it's more because the device is cheaper than a typical stenography machine would cost, but I don't know that for sure.
"I hear you're a Romulan now, Father!"
Lots of planets have an Ireland.
Social media has also done its hardest to try and push people away from using it. Between the culture being awful, and there being an increasing number of roadblocks to using it, that ironically ruins discoverability for anyone who might want to use social media.
For example, if you want to use Reddit, and see a link, there's a lot of posts that you can't see without having an account and logging in. That's a big ask for something that you're not even sure that you want to sign up for, which would only be worse since you couldn't sidestep that using the old reddit interface.
Meanwhile, Twitter not only makes it so that you can't see much of anything without being logged in, but they're trying some new scheme where if you have an account, you need to download the app and give them your biometrics to confirm that you're human before you can use your account.
If you've scarcely used either site, why would you start now? Everything wants you to jump through more and more hoops to verify that you're actually a human, and if you don't have an account, the content that you can see doesn't seem to much of anything interesting. When not logged in, some subreddit and posts are completely inaccessible, and on Twitter, you can only see the tweet, but not the replies, or recent user posts.
Both of those were the main draws for each site. Why would any new user want to use them now? The only thing that they have is their reputation, and that will slowly go away with time.
Once upon a time, for example, Twitter was once the haven for beginner programmers, because they had a nice, free easy-to-use API that anyone could use to make bots and learn how to use APIs in general. Reddit was not far behind that. But that's mostly gone now. Reddit no longer approves API keys for the most part, and is working to shut down the public APIs that it has left, and Twitter has locked theirs behind a paywall.
For pens, I've found the cheap ones from Muji to be quite nice. They've a replaceable core and are also cheap if the body does break.
Is there such a thing as a non-BIFL ruler? Especially a metal one. They're basically a big stick. Not much that can go wrong there.