The retaliatory tariffs if we did would be devastating for the US, because so much of our overall trade balances are carried by services rather than tangible goods.
I'm not a primary user. Just cleaned up the existing codebase to make it open source. But you could use this to visualise attentions and debug the model.
For an example if you're working on a Q&A model, you can check which tokens in the prompt contributed to the output. It's possible to detect issues like output not paying attention to any important part of the prompt.
The issue with the ambiguity of usage plague lots of OSS projects. Guides/Tutorials will always help drive usage much more, just look at the usage of GPT-3 vs ChatGPT (which is GPT-3.5 with WebUI slapped on top of it).
I don't think mentioning the quality of the public schools is relevant. Poor people are almost always stuck in public schools (on occasion they can get aid for private schools). This rule on banning certain math classes applies to all public schools regardless of how good or bad they are. This means even if a poor kid went to the best public school in the world, they would still be impacted.
I have met teachers who would go out of their ways in helping the students to learn. My teachers from many years ago were like this. That's the perk of the good ones. But other than that, I agree with you
You think the resourceful parents are just gonna sit on their hands and thinking: oops the school is not gonna teach the subjects, we are just gonna to collectively forget out them.
No. They will do whatever they can to make sure their children get the education. They will pay extra. Some will teach their children themselves.
Again, this is regardless of race/religion/lgbtq or anything. It's all hands on deck when it comes to providing for the children.
Sometimes I really doubt whether people are really that naive online? Or are they arguing for the sake of the argument? Tbh, I have never seen anyone in real life doesn't understand the situation and the parents that I am talking about.
Replit’s 100 Days of Code for Python, with the built in AI tutor was a game changer. Before when I tried to learn I would constantly get stuck with a bug, now you can go full
speed as the AI is excellent of nudging you back on course.