Oh, this is so sad. Joe was indeed a wonderful giant! So wise, so brilliant, so enthusiastic...
@magdalenaortiz
Researcher of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, passionate about logic. Mexican living in Austria raisings three wonderfully multicultural, multilingual kids π²π½π±πΉπ¦πΉπΈπͺπͺπΈ Slava Ukraini πΊπ¦
Oh, this is so sad. Joe was indeed a wonderful giant! So wise, so brilliant, so enthusiastic...
Of course.
Unless the conversation is somehow about the specifics of the physical reading experience (e.g. paper vs ebook, words per second, font size...) then of course listening is just a way of reading the book.
"Sopliaci" seems similar to "mocoso", a very common term for children in Mexico.
Similarly popular is "escuincle", which is a spanization of the nahuatl word "itzcuintli" meaning "dog" (as in Xoloitzcuintle share.google/cEGpjAaKOZQh...)
Β‘AsΓ no se puede, chingaos!
Por cierto, tambiΓ©n soy cΓ³mputologa, pero hago lΓ³gica y GOFAI π
Β‘QuΓ© valiente, compatriota
I gave up on translating it before I even started π
Happy World Linguistics Day from Vienna, Austria!
@axelpolleres.wien.rocks.ap.brid.gy @magdalenaortiz.bsky.social
#AI #ML #KR #Logic
I think what makes CS an outlier is the role of conference publications, which are short (from experience, between 7 and 16 pages). But for journals (at least outside the more engineering-styled machine learning areas), I would be surprised if the average count was significantly below 40.
In very Mexican slang: Β‘Γchale galleta! - throw it some cookie!
In Mexico we often use Batman's grandma (la abuelita de Batman) with exactly the same purpose
Maybe it is not a desire, but just an uncontrolled impulse? π€·ββοΈ
Oh, thank you βΊοΈ
Math and puff sleeves, what a winning combo π€©
As a scientist celebrating my birthday today, I feel honoured by the company and humbled by the high bar they set πͺ
Lviv and Lutsk.
And Kyiv attacked at record levels. And it doesn't even make the front page anymore, let alone "consequences".
Europe and the world just let Putin bomb away freely...
Yes, I fully share your view: for the large AI venues, peer review does not scale up with sufficient quality. We need new approaches.
We just had for dinner Ε altibarΕ‘Δiai! π€©
My kids (and their Mexican mother) are totally into its pink yumminess π«π©·
Yep, there is certainly some room for slapping... π
GoFundMe?
They leave so little room for parody! We need whole new vocabularies, whole new genres to even get started...
Cute dog holding in its muzzle a sign that reads "Nimm ein Sackerl fΓΌr mein Gackerl"
The Viennese Gackerl-Sackerl is not bad
Well, the catch is that enough human beings decided to elect one of their the most ignorant, vile and stupid fellow humans as president, and gave him all the reasons to believe he could be a king.
A good old-fashioned absolutist despot, and a particularly stupid one for that π€·ββοΈ
My kids usually say AmeisenscheiΓe. And it's good π
@adamcsharp.bsky.social Hey Adam! π I am formalizing some quotes and proverbs for my undergrad logic course. But my selection is dull π«€
I would be eternally obliged if you would kindly throw my way a few of your favorites (preferably using some/all/there is/there isn't, and maybe negations) π«Ά
Left: No suit because someone invaded his country
Right: No suit because he wants to invade someoneβs country
LLMs are not all of AI.
By far.
There are other fundamentally different approaches to AI (symbolic AI, AI planning, KRR...) that are reliable and trustworthy, whose capacities and limits we can accurately understand. Many of us have worked towards reliable intelligent systems for a long time.
Butterfly in Nahuatl is "papalotl" π¦.
This beautiful word is the root of "papalote", which is the usual word for kite in Mexico and Cuba πͺ
The price they are paying for defending our freedom.
So unfair, so heartbreaking.
π’
It's beyond all doubt who deserves the gratitude.
Chingadera is a wonderful word, but unfortunately not βsalonfΓ€hig". Hence Dingsbums (and occasional Austrian variations such as Dingsabumsa) predominate in our multilingual family π€·ββοΈ.