Of course it depends on what you're doing with the information. If you're compressing it in order to sort 100 million board positions for a minmax algorithm, it might make sense to use a representation that makes queries cheaper at the cost of size.
If instead you're trying to store every competition chess game in history, then it depends on what you're trying to do with them. Look for similar board positions?
If you're trying to allow inmates in a Dumas-inspired prison secretly play chess against each other over a covert channel, then detection is the problem. Which might mean compression (fewer signals to hear) or masking the signal as random noise.
The ChatGPT-generated section sounds exactly like the substance-free content farm articles you would find if you searched for "how to choose a laser printer".
What really steams my clams are sites that wholesale lift reams of copy, minus introduction and summary, from Baeldung and others that do the good work, but pepper them with enough google bait so that they are ranked higher than the original. (I speculate that detecting and down-ranking this practice is not considered a priority by google because the copy-cats are riddled with ads so generate more revenue per organic result listing)
I find this collusion unethical. And should be illegal, but I hesitate to ask our lawmakers to understand the nuance when their lobby income stream relies on the opposite.
The cool part will be when ChatGPT-like systems Hoover all of the content generated by ChatGPT and use it for their training data. Which in turn will generate content that gets hoovered up by yet more systems.
At some point some of these models might be trained predominantly by the output of other machine learning models!
I have a Pixel 6A on T-Mobile. I keep 5G turned off because it's usually slower and flakier than LTE, visibly chews through the battery (a percentage point every couple of minutes), and heats up the phone.
Are you running the latest Android release on it? I had a Pixel 6 Pro on T-Mo and experienced almost identical issues until I updated it some months ago
Turns out Google pushed the 6 series out before the OS was "ready" and "forgot" to tell anyone
My understanding is that universities in the U.S. often own much of the real estate around their campuses. (This is particularly true at Stanford; even faculty members who want to live nearby end up renting from Stanford or "buying" land leases.)
University and hospital affiliates are often the biggest slumlords in their area. Having a buffer to make room for future expansion that produces income is a winning strategy.
It's not just changes in aspect ratio (i.e. the shape of the frame). In Sandman, they compress the actual image, so everything looks stretched vertically.
One of the most famous type errors in recent history did in fact crash a spaceship.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mars_Climate_Orbiter#Cause_o...