Riccati EditionPrevious: >>16940654
Ricatti cheese is delicious on pasta. I also like going to the regatta boat races. Not sure who the fuck this guy is but he can get it too. You're next.
>Terry is now doing ads for OpenAI>you were born just in time to watch math become a pay to win esport
>>16991877It's what the Satanic Reptilian NWO wants, so it's going to happen unfortunately.
>>16991877wasn't he just complaining that AI is bad for education
>>16991877It seems like none of these big names have considered how bad it will be that we’re about to have academic research become a pay to win game where you can’t compete unless you have access to the latest models (they have access to internal models btw, you literally cannot even pay to access this unless you’re part of the club)But I think that’s just the way it seems. I think really what it is is that people like Gowers and Tao know they’re safe so why would they care where this is quickly heading for everyone else? They’re not stupid, they know everyone else is about to get permafucked but they already made it so it’s just tough shit for (You).
Is there a closed form answer for the angle alpha? Circles of the same color are same size.
Everything is fucking going AI and ai hate it. I feel like I'm watching IQ points getting slurped out of people's craniums. Future generations may be looking at an idiocracy world.
>>16991899I was able to learn concepts way faster with AI what the fuck is he talking about.
>>16991907>we’re about to have academic research become a pay to win gameIt literally always has been. Do you know how much journal subscriptions cost? Probably not, because it's the universities that pay for them (and if you're an independent researcher, you can hope it's on Arxiv or get fucked). I imagine it'd be the same for this, if and when there becomes enough demand for it.
>>16988688
>>16991839How does one start to learn math
>>16992285No that’s not true, they actually can waive it for people who genuinely can’t pay. Also you know full well that’s a completely different sort of thing than “you must partner with this AI company or you literally cannot compete no matter how smart you are”
>>16992395Im a retard so dont listen to me but Im going through a series of books called Baldor:Aritmética Baldor Then I will through Geometría Baldor Finally Alegra Baldor While simultaneity going through The Elements by Euclid.I do the exercises on an eink tablet so I dont end up with a pile of papers and books.
>>16992417*Algebra Baldor*While simultaneously
>>16992417Who decided that you have to start with Algebra, then geometry then algebra 3-4 then either trig, calc or pre calc?
>>16992457I've also found it weird that geometry comes after algebra since historically it was the other way around. Geometry is also far more general and intuitive and is closer to what math is actually about (namely, abstraction). Algebra is usually taught as tedious computation but I guess is a more natural extension of the arithmetic that's taught in grade school.
Is non-commutative geometry (Connes version) interesting or useful for any other fields of mathematics? I am asking because the only 2 'applications' I know of are the noncommutative standard model in physics and the Riemann hypothesis, which are not exactly the most reasonable goals for a midwit like me.It seems very elegant to me because it translates geometry, which I suck at, into functional analysis, which I'm good at.
Revisiting all my shitty highschool math, trying to relearn the majority of it. Failed most of it because I couldn't really understand a bunch. How one thing related, lead into or built on the other. Shit like calculus may as well be some highly alien machine where I couldn't begin to attempt to intuit any sort of interactive pieces.Currently it's mostly just arithmetic and basic algebra, trying to understand it more thoroughly.