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In some sense, it’s impressive that Claude can play Pokémon with any facility at all. When developing AI systems that find dominant strategies in games like Go and Dota 2, engineers generally start their algorithms off with deep knowledge of a game’s rules and/or basic strategies, as well as a reward function to guide them toward better performance. For Claude Plays Pokémon, though, project developer and Anthropic employee David Hershey says he started with an unmodified, generalized Claude model that wasn’t specifically trained or tuned to play Pokémon games in any way.
“This is purely the various other things that [Claude] understands about the world being used to point at video games,” Hershey told Ars. “So it has a sense of a Pokémon. If you go to claude.ai and ask about Pokémon, it knows what Pokémon is based on what it's read… If you ask, it'll tell you there's eight gym badges, it'll tell you the first one is Brock… it knows the broad structure.”
This is the camp I’m in with AI. Is it super human? Obviously not in this specific instance, but still, undeniably impressive that a large language model is able to get as far as it can.
🔗 a linked post to
gq.com »
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originally shared here on
This whole profile got me very excited to watch the new season of Gemstones. Danny’s approach to life, while perhaps initially off-putting to us stodgy midwesterners, is one I’m choosing to adopt in my late thirties.
It would be a mistake, he continued, for the movie business to leave behind young people. He’d been thinking about his son, and the sort of content that appealed to him. “To him, a YouTube dude is a million times cooler than any actor that he might come across. And I look at him like, He’s right, man. These fucking guys are making shit with their friends, making tons of money. And they have no bosses. People want to see a future where they get to ball, they get to have fun, and they get to do it their way. And I wonder if the film industry conveys that to people anymore.”
I’m at Nickelodeon Resort this week, and they have a bunch of character meet and greet opportunities. One of which was the Ninja Turtles.
As we walked past, I holler at my son and said, “Look! There’s Mikey!”
Gus looked around with the biggest, most excited face you could imagine on a 5 year old, and hollered, “Where? Where?”
I pointed directly at Mikey and said, “Right there!” How could he miss him?
Then, with a dejected tone, he says, “Dad, that’s just Michelangelo. That’s not Mikey.”
Mikey, to him, is not a ninja turtle. It is one half of the popular YouTube gamers Mikey and JJ.
If you want to onboard someone onto a new codebase, let them rewrite part of it. They’ll learn a lot from the process, but crucially they’ll become an instant subject-matter expert on the part they rewrote. With a few refactors, you can go from a situation where you’re the only go-to engineer to a situation where multiple engineers on the team can take ownership. That’s the only sustainable way to run a large codebase.
This is exactly what I’ve been doing at work for the last six months, and now I’m the subject matter expert on a small number of essential components of the system.
Journalism has long been in crisis. Business models are broken. Trust is eroding. And recently, there’s been a notable uptick in news avoidance. Worldwide, nearly four in 10 people say they sometimes or often avoid the news, according to the latest research from the Reuters Institute.
As much as I care about journalism’s survival — it’s an industry I work in and believe is crucial to a functioning society — I can’t blame people for stepping back. I’m one of them. And I no longer feel guilty about it.
One lesson I hope our generation learns is that it’s okay to step back and let the younger ones step up. They’ve got boundless energy and are smart.
Recover, regroup, and when you’re ready, you can rejoin the fight.
These Collab Fund blog posts are exceptionally dense with solid advice. I couldn’t find only one pull quote to attach to this post because there are way too many.
This article touches on independence in all of its forms (financial, moral, tribal, etm.), as well as the importance of pairing it with purpose.
Find Wikipedia Entries Near You That Are Missing An Image
originally shared here on
The very first app I ever built for iOS was an app where you could push a button and it would generate a random celebrity for you.
I used only images in Wikipedia, and at the time, the vast majority of quality images of celebrities were from people who went to a convention or premiere, snapped a bunch of photos of as many famous people as possible, and then uploaded them to the public domain.
These are unsung heroes, as far as I'm concerned.
I always admired these people and thought maybe one day I would contribute to Wikipedia in this way.
So I used ChatGPT 4o to whip up a script that allows a user to provide a set of geo-coordinates and it'll return a list of the closest Wikipedia entries which are missing photos.
The next time you are out on a walk in your neighborhood and you come across a park that you recall is missing an image, you can pull out your phone, snap a photo of it, and take ten minutes to release it into the public domain so other dorks in the future can see what your neighborhood looks like.
And by the way: I know that if I didn't have a large language model, there's no chance I'd be sitting here at 11pm looking up API documentation to try and figure out how I would put this dumb idea to use. This is the power of LLMs, people. This blog post took roughly three times as long to write than the code that was written.
I did have to refine the output once, and there's clearly no great error handling, and some of the entries it returns do have a photo yadda yadda. I get it.
This isn't a tool that one uses to produce artisanal, well-crafted software that will stand the test of time.
This is a tool that, in roughly 5 minutes, empowered me with information that I can now use to make my community a tiny bit better.
Recreating my favorite childhood McDonalds toy in Minecraft
originally shared here on
When I was a kid, we had this dope McDonalds Little People toy:
My kids and I have been playing a lot of Minecraft lately. We have a world where we're building a ton of different buildings, like hotels, roller coasters, and pet stores. It's basically the same games they play IRL.
I thought it would be fun to try and recreate this play set in our world, and here's what we were able to come up with:
What I'm most proud of is how much the kids helped! I laid the foundation and got the walls and roof built, but the kids handled the interior completely by themselves. Gus even built a road as a sort of drive thru.