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@lleyton
lleyton / translation.md
Last active January 23, 2024 16:53
(ENG) Open Source Business Challenges and Reality, Rui Ueyama

Open Source Business Challenges and Reality

Original Japanese note here.

Original Author: Rui Ueyama (creator of the mold linker)

Translated by @windowsboy111

Minimally edited by @lleyton

Training open-source LLMs on ChatGPT output is a really bad idea.

Everyone is now racing to create open-source alternatives to compete with GPT3.5/GPT4. A common shortcut used by some teams to bootstrap their effort is to fine-tune their model on ChatGPT output. I used to think it was a good idea and totally fair play to do this. Actually, I still think it’s fair play. OpenAI effectively distilled the entire web into its models. They are saying themself that they are using publicly accessible information (mostly). So distilling their model is, in effect, distilling the public open web, so small Term of Service details aside, I don’t see major ethical problems with that. Right? Well, it’s not entirely true and I realized now that, even when ignoring the ethical considerations, using their output is a really bad idea.

First of all, from a purely technical point of view, as @yoavgo is explaining it beautifully in his recent post, there is no way to align LLMs correctly without the RLHF component. I encourag

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@sshymko
sshymko / install_mysql_client.sh
Last active March 14, 2024 20:10
Install MySQL 5.7 client on Amazon Linux 2
#!/bin/sh
sudo yum install -y https://dev.mysql.com/get/mysql57-community-release-el7-11.noarch.rpm
sudo yum install -y mysql-community-client
@ruanbekker
ruanbekker / cheatsheet-elasticsearch.md
Last active April 24, 2024 00:11
Elasticsearch Cheatsheet : Example API usage of using Elasticsearch with curl
@judy2k
judy2k / parse_dotenv.bash
Created March 22, 2017 13:34
Parse a .env (dotenv) file directly using BASH
# Pass the env-vars to MYCOMMAND
eval $(egrep -v '^#' .env | xargs) MYCOMMAND
# … or ...
# Export the vars in .env into your shell:
export $(egrep -v '^#' .env | xargs)
@cvan
cvan / HOWTO.md
Last active March 20, 2024 17:56
How to serve a custom HTTPS domain on GitHub Pages with CloudFlare: *FREE*, secure and performant by default

Instructions

CloudFlare is an awesome reverse cache proxy and CDN that provides DNS, free HTTPS (TLS) support, best-in-class performance settings (gzip, SDCH, HTTP/2, sane Cache-Control and E-Tag headers, etc.), minification, etc.

  1. Make sure you have registered a domain name.
  2. Sign up for CloudFlare and create an account for your domain.
  3. In your domain registrar's admin panel, point the nameservers to CloudFlare's (refer to this awesome list of links for instructions for various registrars).
  4. From the CloudFlare settings for that domain, enable HTTPS/SSL and set up a Page Rule to force HTTPS redirects. (If you want to get fancy, you can also enable automatic minification for text-based assets [HTML/CSS/JS/SVG/etc.], which is a pretty cool feature if you don't want already have a build step for minification.)
  5. If you
@domenic
domenic / 0-github-actions.md
Last active April 8, 2024 23:35
Auto-deploying built products to gh-pages with Travis

Auto-deploying built products to gh-pages with GitHub Actions

This is a set up for projects which want to check in only their source files, but have their gh-pages branch automatically updated with some compiled output every time they push.

A file below this one contains the steps for doing this with Travis CI. However, these days I recommend GitHub Actions, for the following reasons:

  • It is much easier and requires less steps, because you are already authenticated with GitHub, so you don't need to share secret keys across services like you do when coordinate Travis CI and GitHub.
  • It is free, with no quotas.
  • Anecdotally, builds are much faster with GitHub Actions than with Travis CI, especially in terms of time spent waiting for a builder.
@jobsamuel
jobsamuel / readme.md
Last active January 19, 2024 18:26
Run NodeJS as a Service on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS

Run NodeJS as a Service on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS

With Node you can write very fast JavaScript programs serverside. It's pretty easy to install Node, code your program, and run it. But > how do you make it run nicely in the background like a true server?

  • Go to /etc/init/
  • $ sudo vim yourapp.conf
  • Paste script.conf
  • $ sudo start yourapp
  • And when you wanna kill the process $ sudo stop yourapp