From b0c5898aa4f97ac62f10eead1c263a6902425392 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Yuchen Pei Date: Thu, 1 Jul 2021 15:26:34 +1000 Subject: minor changes and removed some unused assets. --- assets/wangana.png | Bin 1447628 -> 0 bytes assets/wangana_screenshot_index.png | Bin 90981 -> 0 bytes html-templates/postamble.html | 2 +- pages/blog.org | 20 - pages/microblog.org | 723 ------------------------------------ post-process.sh | 5 + 6 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 744 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 assets/wangana.png delete mode 100644 assets/wangana_screenshot_index.png delete mode 100644 pages/blog.org delete mode 100644 pages/microblog.org diff --git a/assets/wangana.png b/assets/wangana.png deleted file mode 100644 index b8457dc..0000000 Binary files a/assets/wangana.png and /dev/null differ diff --git a/assets/wangana_screenshot_index.png b/assets/wangana_screenshot_index.png deleted file mode 100644 index ecaa8ac..0000000 Binary files a/assets/wangana_screenshot_index.png and /dev/null differ diff --git a/html-templates/postamble.html b/html-templates/postamble.html index 98b2479..ae7fba1 100644 --- a/html-templates/postamble.html +++ b/html-templates/postamble.html @@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ - + diff --git a/pages/blog.org b/pages/blog.org deleted file mode 100644 index 7800bc3..0000000 --- a/pages/blog.org +++ /dev/null @@ -1,20 +0,0 @@ -#+TITLE: Yuchen's Blog - -- 2019-03-14 - *[[file:posts/2019-03-14-great-but-manageable-expectations.org][Great but Manageable Expectations]]* -- 2019-03-13 - *[[file:posts/2019-03-13-a-tail-of-two-densities.org][A Tail of Two Densities]]* -- 2019-02-14 - *[[file:posts/2019-02-14-raise-your-elbo.org][Raise your ELBO]]* -- 2019-01-03 - *[[file:posts/2019-01-03-discriminant-analysis.org][Discriminant analysis]]* -- 2018-12-02 - *[[file:posts/2018-12-02-lime-shapley.org][Shapley, LIME and SHAP]]* -- 2018-06-03 - *[[file:posts/2018-06-03-automatic_differentiation.org][Automatic differentiation]]* -- 2018-04-29 - *[[file:posts/2018-04-10-update-open-research.org][Updates on open research]]* -- 2017-08-07 - *[[file:posts/2017-08-07-mathematical_bazaar.org][The Mathematical Bazaar]]* -- 2017-04-25 - *[[file:posts/2017-04-25-open_research_toywiki.org][Open mathematical research and launching toywiki]]* -- 2016-10-13 - *[[file:posts/2016-10-13-q-robinson-schensted-knuth-polymer.org][A \(q\)-Robinson-Schensted-Knuth algorithm and a \(q\)-polymer]]* -- 2015-07-15 - *[[file:posts/2015-07-15-double-macdonald-polynomials-macdonald-superpolynomials.org][AMS review of 'Double Macdonald polynomials as the stable limit of Macdonald superpolynomials' by Blondeau-Fournier, Lapointe and Mathieu]]* -- 2015-07-01 - *[[file:posts/2015-07-01-causal-quantum-product-levy-area.org][On a causal quantum double product integral related to Lévy stochastic area.]]* -- 2015-05-30 - *[[file:posts/2015-05-30-infinite-binary-words-containing-repetitions-odd-periods.org][AMS review of 'Infinite binary words containing repetitions of odd period' by Badkobeh and Crochemore]]* -- 2015-04-02 - *[[file:posts/2015-04-02-juggling-skill-tree.org][jst]]* -- 2015-04-01 - *[[file:posts/2015-04-01-unitary-double-products.org][Unitary causal quantum stochastic double products as universal]]* -- 2015-01-20 - *[[file:posts/2015-01-20-weighted-interpretation-super-catalan-numbers.org][AMS review of 'A weighted interpretation for the super Catalan]]* -- 2014-04-01 - *[[file:posts/2014-04-01-q-robinson-schensted-symmetry-paper.org][Symmetry property of \(q\)-weighted Robinson-Schensted algorithms and branching algorithms]]* -- 2013-06-01 - *[[file:posts/2013-06-01-q-robinson-schensted-paper.org][A \(q\)-weighted Robinson-Schensted algorithm]]* \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/pages/microblog.org b/pages/microblog.org deleted file mode 100644 index 43e5ecc..0000000 --- a/pages/microblog.org +++ /dev/null @@ -1,723 +0,0 @@ -#+TITLE: Yuchen's Microblog - -- *[[ia-lawsuit][2020-08-02]]* - ia lawsuit - <> - - The four big publishers Hachette, HarperCollins, Wiley, and Penguin - Random House are still pursuing Internet Archive. - - #+begin_quote - [Their] lawsuit does not stop at seeking to end the practice of - Controlled Digital Lending. These publishers call for the destruction - of the 1.5 million digital books that Internet Archive makes available - to our patrons. This form of digital book burning is unprecedented and - unfairly disadvantages people with print disabilities. For the blind, - ebooks are a lifeline, yet less than one in ten exists in accessible - formats. Since 2010, Internet Archive has made our lending library - available to the blind and print disabled community, in addition to - sighted users. If the publishers are successful with their lawsuit, - more than a million of those books would be deleted from the - Internet's digital shelves forever. - #+end_quote - - [[https://blog.archive.org/2020/07/29/internet-archive-responds-to-publishers-lawsuit/][Libraries - lend books, and must continue to lend books: Internet Archive responds - to publishers' lawsuit]] -- *[[fsf-membership][2020-08-02]]* - fsf-membership - <> - - I am a proud associate member of Free Software Freedom. For me the - philosophy of Free Software is about ensuring the enrichment of a - digital commons, so that knowledge and information are not concentrated - in the hands of selected privileged people and locked up as - "intellectual property". The genius of copyleft licenses like GNU (A)GPL - ensures software released for the public, remains public. Open source - does not care about that. - - If you also care about the public good, the hacker ethics, or the spirit - of the web, please take a moment to consider joining FSF as an associate - member. It comes with [[https://www.fsf.org/associate/benefits][numerous - perks and benefits]]. -- *[[how-can-you-help-ia][2020-06-21]]* - how-can-you-help-ia - <> - - [[https://blog.archive.org/2020/06/14/how-can-you-help-the-internet-archive/][How - can you help the Internet Archive?]] Use it. It's more than the Wayback - Machine. And get involved. -- *[[open-library][2020-06-12]]* - open-library - <> - - Open Library was cofounded by Aaron Swartz. As part of the Internet - Archive, it has done good work to spread knowledge. However it is - currently - [[https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2020/06/internet-archive-ends-emergency-library-early-to-appease-publishers/][being - sued by four major publishers]] for the - [[https://archive.org/details/nationalemergencylibrary][National - Emergency Library]]. IA decided to - [[https://blog.archive.org/2020/06/10/temporary-national-emergency-library-to-close-2-weeks-early-returning-to-traditional-controlled-digital-lending/][close - the NEL two weeks earlier than planned]], but the lawsuit is not over, - which in the worst case scenario has the danger of resulting in - Controlled Digital Lending being considered illegal and (less likely) - bancruptcy of the Internet Archive. If this happens it will be a big - setback of the free-culture movement. -- *[[sanders-suspend-campaign][2020-04-15]]* - sanders-suspend-campaign - <> - - Suspending the campaign is different from dropping out of the race. - Bernie Sanders remains on the ballot, and indeed in his campaign - suspension speech he encouraged people to continue voting for him in the - democratic primaries to push for changes in the convention. -- *[[defense-stallman][2019-09-30]]* - defense-stallman - <> - - Someone wrote a bold article titled - [[https://geoff.greer.fm/2019/09/30/in-defense-of-richard-stallman/]["In - Defense of Richard Stallman"]]. Kudos to him. - - Also, an interesting read: - [[https://cfenollosa.com/blog/famous-computer-public-figure-suffers-the-consequences-for-asshole-ish-behavior.html][Famous - public figure in tech suffers the consequences for asshole-ish - behavior]]. -- *[[stallman-resign][2019-09-29]]* - stallman-resign - <> - - Last week Richard Stallman resigned from FSF. It is a great loss for the - free software movement. - - The apparent cause of his resignation and the events that triggered it - reflect some alarming trends of the zeitgeist. Here is a detailed review - of what happened: [[https://sterling-archermedes.github.io/][Low grade - "journalists" and internet mob attack RMS with lies. In-depth review.]]. - Some interesting articles on this are: - [[https://jackbaruth.com/?p=16779][Weekly Roundup: The Passion Of Saint - iGNUcius Edition]], - [[http://techrights.org/2019/09/17/rms-witch-hunt/][Why I Once Called - for Richard Stallman to Step Down]]. - - Dishonest and misleading media pieces involved in this incident include - [[https://www.thedailybeast.com/famed-mit-computer-scientist-richard-stallman-defends-epstein-victims-were-entirely-willing][The - Daily Beast]], - [[https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/9ke3ke/famed-computer-scientist-richard-stallman-described-epstein-victims-as-entirely-willing][Vice]], - [[https://techcrunch.com/2019/09/16/computer-scientist-richard-stallman-who-defended-jeffrey-epstein-resigns-from-mit-csail-and-the-free-software-foundation/][Tech - Crunch]], - [[https://www.wired.com/story/richard-stallmans-exit-heralds-a-new-era-in-tech/][Wired]]. -- *[[decss-haiku][2019-03-16]]* - decss-haiku - <> - - #+begin_quote - #+begin_example - Muse! When we learned to - count, little did we know all - the things we could do - - some day by shuffling - those numbers: Pythagoras - said "All is number" - - long before he saw - computers and their effects, - or what they could do - - by computation, - naive and mechanical - fast arithmetic. - - It changed the world, it - changed our consciousness and lives - to have such fast math - - available to - us and anyone who cared - to learn programming. - - Now help me, Muse, for - I wish to tell a piece of - controversial math, - - for which the lawyers - of DVD CCA - don't forbear to sue: - - that they alone should - know or have the right to teach - these skills and these rules. - - (Do they understand - the content, or is it just - the effects they see?) - - And all mathematics - is full of stories (just read - Eric Temple Bell); - - and CSS is - no exception to this rule. - Sing, Muse, decryption - - once secret, as all - knowledge, once unknown: how to - decrypt DVDs. - #+end_example - #+end_quote - - Seth Schoen, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DeCSS_haiku][DeCSS haiku]] -- *[[learning-undecidable][2019-01-27]]* - learning-undecidable - <> - - My take on the - [[https://www.nature.com/articles/s42256-018-0002-3][Nature paper - /Learning can be undecidable/]]: - - Fantastic article, very clearly written. - - So it reduces a kind of learninability called estimating the maximum - (EMX) to the cardinality of real numbers which is undecidable. - - When it comes to the relation between EMX and the rest of machine - learning framework, the article mentions that EMX belongs to "extensions - of PAC learnability include Vapnik's statistical learning setting and - the equivalent general learning setting by Shalev-Shwartz and - colleagues" (I have no idea what these two things are), but it does not - say whether EMX is representative of or reduces to common learning - tasks. So it is not clear whether its undecidability applies to ML at - large. - - Another condition to the main theorem is the union bounded closure - assumption. It seems a reasonable property of a family of sets, but then - again I wonder how that translates to learning. - - The article says "By now, we know of quite a few independence [from - mathematical axioms] results, mostly for set theoretic questions like - the continuum hypothesis, but also for results in algebra, analysis, - infinite combinatorics and more. Machine learning, so far, has escaped - this fate." but the description of the EMX learnability makes it more - like a classical mathematical / theoretical computer science problem - rather than machine learning. - - An insightful conclusion: "How come learnability can neither be proved - nor refuted? A closer look reveals that the source of the problem is in - defining learnability as the existence of a learning function rather - than the existence of a learning algorithm. In contrast with the - existence of algorithms, the existence of functions over infinite - domains is a (logically) subtle issue." - - In relation to practical problems, it uses an example of ad targeting. - However, A lot is lost in translation from the main theorem to this ad - example. - - The EMX problem states: given a domain X, a distribution P over X which - is unknown, some samples from P, and a family of subsets of X called F, - find A in F that approximately maximises P(A). - - The undecidability rests on X being the continuous [0, 1] interval, and - from the insight, we know the problem comes from the cardinality of - subsets of the [0, 1] interval, which is "logically subtle". - - In the ad problem, the domain X is all potential visitors, which is - finite because there are finite number of people in the world. In this - case P is a categorical distribution over the 1..n where n is the - population of the world. One can have a good estimate of the parameters - of a categorical distribution by asking for sufficiently large number of - samples and computing the empirical distribution. Let's call the - estimated distribution Q. One can choose the from F (also finite) the - set that maximises Q(A) which will be a solution to EMX. - - In other words, the theorem states: EMX is undecidable because not all - EMX instances are decidable, because there are some nasty ones due to - infinities. That does not mean no EMX instance is decidable. And I think - the ad instance is decidable. Is there a learning task that actually - corresponds to an undecidable EMX instance? I don't know, but I will not - believe the result of this paper is useful until I see one. - - h/t Reynaldo Boulogne -- *[[gavin-belson][2018-12-11]]* - gavin-belson - <> - - #+begin_quote - I don't know about you people, but I don't want to live in a world - where someone else makes the world a better place better than we do. - #+end_quote - - Gavin Belson, Silicon Valley S2E1. - - I came across this quote in - [[https://slate.com/business/2018/12/facebook-emails-lawsuit-embarrassing-mark-zuckerberg.html][a - Slate post about Facebook]] -- *[[margins][2018-10-05]]* - margins - <> - - With Fermat's Library's new tool - [[https://fermatslibrary.com/margins][margins]], you can host your own - journal club. -- *[[rnn-turing][2018-09-18]]* - rnn-turing - <> - - Just some non-rigorous guess / thought: Feedforward networks are like - combinatorial logic, and recurrent networks are like sequential logic - (e.g. data flip-flop is like the feedback connection in RNN). Since NAND - - combinatorial logic + sequential logic = von Neumann machine which is - an approximation of the Turing machine, it is not surprising that RNN - (with feedforward networks) is Turing complete (assuming that neural - networks can learn the NAND gate). -- *[[zitierkartell][2018-09-07]]* - zitierkartell - <> - - [[https://academia.stackexchange.com/questions/116489/counter-strategy-against-group-that-repeatedly-does-strategic-self-citations-and][Counter - strategy against group that repeatedly does strategic self-citations and - ignores other relevant research]] -- *[[short-science][2018-09-05]]* - short-science - <> - - #+begin_quote - - - - ShortScience.org is a platform for post-publication discussion - aiming to improve accessibility and reproducibility of research - ideas. - - The website has over 800 summaries, mostly in machine learning, - written by the community and organized by paper, conference, and - year. - - Reading summaries of papers is useful to obtain the perspective and - insight of another reader, why they liked or disliked it, and their - attempt to demystify complicated sections. - - Also, writing summaries is a good exercise to understand the content - of a paper because you are forced to challenge your assumptions when - explaining it. - - Finally, you can keep up to date with the flood of research by - reading the latest summaries on our Twitter and Facebook pages. - #+end_quote - - [[https://shortscience.org][ShortScience.org]] -- *[[darknet-diaries][2018-08-13]]* - darknet-diaries - <> - - [[https://darknetdiaries.com][Darknet Diaries]] is a cool podcast. - According to its about page it covers "true stories from the dark side - of the Internet. Stories about hackers, defenders, threats, malware, - botnets, breaches, and privacy." -- *[[coursera-basic-income][2018-06-20]]* - coursera-basic-income - <> - - Coursera is having - [[https://www.coursera.org/learn/exploring-basic-income-in-a-changing-economy][a - Teach-Out on Basic Income]]. -- *[[pun-generator][2018-06-19]]* - pun-generator - <> - - [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computational_humor#Pun_generation][Pun - generators exist]]. -- *[[hackers-excerpt][2018-06-15]]* - hackers-excerpt - <> - - #+begin_quote - But as more nontechnical people bought computers, the things that - impressed hackers were not as essential. While the programs themselves - had to maintain a certain standard of quality, it was quite possible - that the most exacting standards---those applied by a hacker who - wanted to add one more feature, or wouldn't let go of a project until - it was demonstrably faster than anything else around---were probably - counterproductive. What seemed more important was marketing. There - were plenty of brilliant programs which no one knew about. Sometimes - hackers would write programs and put them in the public domain, give - them away as easily as John Harris had lent his early copy of - Jawbreaker to the guys at the Fresno computer store. But rarely would - people ask for public domain programs by name: they wanted the ones - they saw advertised and discussed in magazines, demonstrated in - computer stores. It was not so important to have amazingly clever - algorithms. Users would put up with more commonplace ones. - - The Hacker Ethic, of course, held that every program should be as good - as you could make it (or better), infinitely flexible, admired for its - brilliance of concept and execution, and designed to extend the user's - powers. Selling computer programs like toothpaste was heresy. But it - was happening. Consider the prescription for success offered by one of - a panel of high-tech venture capitalists, gathered at a 1982 software - show: "I can summarize what it takes in three words: marketing, - marketing, marketing." When computers are sold like toasters, programs - will be sold like toothpaste. The Hacker Ethic notwithstanding. - #+end_quote - - [[http://www.stevenlevy.com/index.php/books/hackers][Hackers: Heroes of - Computer Revolution]], by Steven Levy. -- *[[catalan-overflow][2018-06-11]]* - catalan-overflow - <> - - To compute Catalan numbers without unnecessary overflow, use the - recurrence formula \(C_n = {4 n - 2 \over n + 1} C_{n - 1}\). -- *[[boyer-moore][2018-06-04]]* - boyer-moore - <> - - The - [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boyer–Moore_majority_vote_algorithm][Boyer-Moore - algorithm for finding the majority of a sequence of elements]] falls in - the category of "very clever algorithms". - - #+begin_example - int majorityElement(vector& xs) { - int count = 0; - int maj = xs[0]; - for (auto x : xs) { - if (x == maj) count++; - else if (count == 0) maj = x; - else count--; - } - return maj; - } - #+end_example -- *[[how-to-learn-on-your-own][2018-05-30]]* - how-to-learn-on-your-own - <> - - Roger Grosse's post - [[https://metacademy.org/roadmaps/rgrosse/learn_on_your_own][How to - learn on your own (2015)]] is an excellent modern guide on how to learn - and research technical stuff (especially machine learning and maths) on - one's own. -- *[[2048-mdp][2018-05-25]]* - 2048-mdp - <<2048-mdp>> - - [[http://jdlm.info/articles/2018/03/18/markov-decision-process-2048.html][This - post]] models 2048 as an MDP and solves it using policy iteration and - backward induction. -- *[[ats][2018-05-22]]* - ats - <> - - #+begin_quote - ATS (Applied Type System) is a programming language designed to unify - programming with formal specification. ATS has support for combining - theorem proving with practical programming through the use of advanced - type systems. A past version of The Computer Language Benchmarks Game - has demonstrated that the performance of ATS is comparable to that of - the C and C++ programming languages. By using theorem proving and - strict type checking, the compiler can detect and prove that its - implemented functions are not susceptible to bugs such as division by - zero, memory leaks, buffer overflow, and other forms of memory - corruption by verifying pointer arithmetic and reference counting - before the program compiles. Additionally, by using the integrated - theorem-proving system of ATS (ATS/LF), the programmer may make use of - static constructs that are intertwined with the operative code to - prove that a function attains its specification. - #+end_quote - - [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ATS_(programming_language)][Wikipedia - entry on ATS]] -- *[[bostoncalling][2018-05-20]]* - bostoncalling - <> - - (5-second fame) I sent a picture of my kitchen sink to BBC and got - mentioned in the [[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3cswg8c][latest - Boston Calling episode]] (listen at 25:54). -- *[[colah-blog][2018-05-18]]* - colah-blog - <> - - [[https://colah.github.io/][colah's blog]] has a cool feature that - allows you to comment on any paragraph of a blog post. Here's an - [[https://colah.github.io/posts/2015-08-Understanding-LSTMs/][example]]. - If it is doable on a static site hosted on Github pages, I suppose it - shouldn't be too hard to implement. This also seems to work more - seamlessly than [[https://fermatslibrary.com/][Fermat's Library]], - because the latter has to embed pdfs in webpages. Now fantasy time: - imagine that one day arXiv shows html versions of papers (through author - uploading or conversion from TeX) with this feature. -- *[[random-forests][2018-05-15]]* - random-forests - <> - - [[https://lagunita.stanford.edu/courses/HumanitiesSciences/StatLearning/Winter2016/info][Stanford - Lagunita's statistical learning course]] has some excellent lectures on - random forests. It starts with explanations of decision trees, followed - by bagged trees and random forests, and ends with boosting. From these - lectures it seems that: - - 1. The term "predictors" in statistical learning = "features" in machine - learning. - 1. The main idea of random forests of dropping predictors for individual - trees and aggregate by majority or average is the same as the idea of - dropout in neural networks, where a proportion of neurons in the - hidden layers are dropped temporarily during different minibatches of - training, effectively averaging over an emsemble of subnetworks. Both - tricks are used as regularisations, i.e. to reduce the variance. The - only difference is: in random forests, all but a square root number - of the total number of features are dropped, whereas the dropout - ratio in neural networks is usually a half. - - By the way, here's a comparison between statistical learning and machine - learning from the slides of the Statistcal Learning course: -- *[[open-review-net][2018-05-14]]* - open-review-net - <> - - Open peer review means peer review process where communications - e.g. comments and responses are public. - - Like [[https://scipost.org/][SciPost]] mentioned in - [[file:/posts/2018-04-10-update-open-research.html][my post]], - [[https://openreview.net][OpenReview.net]] is an example of open peer - review in research. It looks like their focus is machine learning. Their - [[https://openreview.net/about][about page]] states their mission, and - here's [[https://openreview.net/group?id=ICLR.cc/2018/Conference][an - example]] where you can click on each entry to see what it is like. We - definitely need this in the maths research community. -- *[[rnn-fsm][2018-05-11]]* - rnn-fsm - <> - - Related to [[neural-turing-machine][a previous micropost]]. - - [[http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~rgrosse/csc321/lec9.pdf][These slides from - Toronto]] are a nice introduction to RNN (recurrent neural network) from - a computational point of view. It states that RNN can simulate any FSM - (finite state machine, a.k.a. finite automata abbr. FA) with a toy - example computing the parity of a binary string. - - [[http://www.deeplearningbook.org/contents/rnn.html][Goodfellow et. - al.'s book]] (see page 372 and 374) goes one step further, stating that - RNN with a hidden-to-hidden layer can simulate Turing machines, and not - only that, but also the /universal/ Turing machine abbr. UTM (the book - referenced - [[https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022000085710136][Siegelmann-Sontag]]), - a property not shared by the weaker network where the hidden-to-hidden - layer is replaced by an output-to-hidden layer (page 376). - - By the way, the RNN with a hidden-to-hidden layer has the same - architecture as the so-called linear dynamical system mentioned in - [[https://www.coursera.org/learn/neural-networks/lecture/Fpa7y/modeling-sequences-a-brief-overview][Hinton's - video]]. - - From what I have learned, the universality of RNN and feedforward - networks are therefore due to different arguments, the former coming - from Turing machines and the latter from an analytical view of - approximation by step functions. -- *[[math-writing-decoupling][2018-05-10]]* - math-writing-decoupling - <> - - One way to write readable mathematics is to decouple concepts. One idea - is the following template. First write a toy example with all the - important components present in this example, then analyse each - component individually and elaborate how (perhaps more complex) - variations of the component can extend the toy example and induce more - complex or powerful versions of the toy example. Through such - incremental development, one should be able to arrive at any result in - cutting edge research after a pleasant journey. - - It's a bit like the UNIX philosophy, where you have a basic system of - modules like IO, memory management, graphics etc, and modify / improve - each module individually (H/t [[http://nand2tetris.org/][NAND2Tetris]]). - - The book [[http://neuralnetworksanddeeplearning.com/][Neutral networks - and deep learning]] by Michael Nielsen is an example of such approach. - It begins the journey with a very simple neutral net with one hidden - layer, no regularisation, and sigmoid activations. It then analyses each - component including cost functions, the back propagation algorithm, the - activation functions, regularisation and the overall architecture (from - fully connected to CNN) individually and improve the toy example - incrementally. Over the course the accuracy of the example of mnist - grows incrementally from 95.42% to 99.67%. -- *[[neural-nets-activation][2018-05-09]]* - neural-nets-activation - <> - - #+begin_quote - What makes the rectified linear activation function better than the - sigmoid or tanh functions? At present, we have a poor understanding of - the answer to this question. Indeed, rectified linear units have only - begun to be widely used in the past few years. The reason for that - recent adoption is empirical: a few people tried rectified linear - units, often on the basis of hunches or heuristic arguments. They got - good results classifying benchmark data sets, and the practice has - spread. In an ideal world we'd have a theory telling us which - activation function to pick for which application. But at present - we're a long way from such a world. I should not be at all surprised - if further major improvements can be obtained by an even better choice - of activation function. And I also expect that in coming decades a - powerful theory of activation functions will be developed. Today, we - still have to rely on poorly understood rules of thumb and experience. - #+end_quote - - Michael Nielsen, - [[http://neuralnetworksanddeeplearning.com/chap6.html#convolutional_neural_networks_in_practice][Neutral - networks and deep learning]] -- *[[neural-turing-machine][2018-05-09]]* - neural-turing-machine - <> - - #+begin_quote - One way RNNs are currently being used is to connect neural networks - more closely to traditional ways of thinking about algorithms, ways of - thinking based on concepts such as Turing machines and (conventional) - programming languages. [[https://arxiv.org/abs/1410.4615][A 2014 - paper]] developed an RNN which could take as input a - character-by-character description of a (very, very simple!) Python - program, and use that description to predict the output. Informally, - the network is learning to "understand" certain Python programs. - [[https://arxiv.org/abs/1410.5401][A second paper, also from 2014]], - used RNNs as a starting point to develop what they called a neural - Turing machine (NTM). This is a universal computer whose entire - structure can be trained using gradient descent. They trained their - NTM to infer algorithms for several simple problems, such as sorting - and copying. - - As it stands, these are extremely simple toy models. Learning to - execute the Python program =print(398345+42598)= doesn't make a - network into a full-fledged Python interpreter! It's not clear how - much further it will be possible to push the ideas. Still, the results - are intriguing. Historically, neural networks have done well at - pattern recognition problems where conventional algorithmic approaches - have trouble. Vice versa, conventional algorithmic approaches are good - at solving problems that neural nets aren't so good at. No-one today - implements a web server or a database program using a neural network! - It'd be great to develop unified models that integrate the strengths - of both neural networks and more traditional approaches to algorithms. - RNNs and ideas inspired by RNNs may help us do that. - #+end_quote - - Michael Nielsen, - [[http://neuralnetworksanddeeplearning.com/chap6.html#other_approaches_to_deep_neural_nets][Neural - networks and deep learning]] -- *[[nlp-arxiv][2018-05-08]]* - nlp-arxiv - <> - - Primer Science is a tool by a startup called Primer that uses NLP to - summarize contents (but not single papers, yet) on arxiv. A developer of - this tool predicts in - [[https://twimlai.com/twiml-talk-136-taming-arxiv-w-natural-language-processing-with-john-bohannon/#][an - interview]] that progress on AI's ability to extract meanings from AI - research papers will be the biggest accelerant on AI research. -- *[[neural-nets-regularization][2018-05-08]]* - neural-nets-regularization - <> - - #+begin_quote - no-one has yet developed an entirely convincing theoretical - explanation for why regularization helps networks generalize. Indeed, - researchers continue to write papers where they try different - approaches to regularization, compare them to see which works better, - and attempt to understand why different approaches work better or - worse. And so you can view regularization as something of a kludge. - While it often helps, we don't have an entirely satisfactory - systematic understanding of what's going on, merely incomplete - heuristics and rules of thumb. - - There's a deeper set of issues here, issues which go to the heart of - science. It's the question of how we generalize. Regularization may - give us a computational magic wand that helps our networks generalize - better, but it doesn't give us a principled understanding of how - generalization works, nor of what the best approach is. - #+end_quote - - Michael Nielsen, - [[http://neuralnetworksanddeeplearning.com/chap3.html#why_does_regularization_help_reduce_overfitting][Neural - networks and deep learning]] -- *[[sql-injection-video][2018-05-08]]* - sql-injection-video - <> - - Computerphile has some brilliant educational videos on computer science, - like [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ciNHn38EyRc][a demo of SQL - injection]], [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eis11j_iGMs][a toy - example of the lambda calculus]], and - [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9T8A89jgeTI][explaining the Y - combinator]]. -- *[[learning-knowledge-graph-reddit-journal-club][2018-05-07]]* - learning-knowledge-graph-reddit-journal-club - <> - - It is a natural idea to look for ways to learn things like going through - a skill tree in a computer RPG. - - For example I made a - [[https://ypei.me/posts/2015-04-02-juggling-skill-tree.html][DAG for - juggling]]. - - Websites like [[https://knowen.org][Knowen]] and - [[https://metacademy.org][Metacademy]] explore this idea with added - flavour of open collaboration. - - The design of Metacademy looks quite promising. It also has a nice - tagline: "your package manager for knowledge". - - There are so so many tools to assist learning / research / knowledge - sharing today, and we should keep experimenting, in the hope that - eventually one of them will scale. - - On another note, I often complain about the lack of a place to discuss - math research online, but today I found on Reddit some journal clubs on - machine learning: - [[https://www.reddit.com/r/MachineLearning/comments/8aluhs/d_machine_learning_wayr_what_are_you_reading_week/][1]], - [[https://www.reddit.com/r/MachineLearning/comments/8elmd8/d_anyone_having_trouble_reading_a_particular/][2]]. - If only we had this for maths. On the other hand r/math does have some - interesting recurring threads as well: - [[https://www.reddit.com/r/math/wiki/everythingaboutx][Everything about - X]] and - [[https://www.reddit.com/r/math/search?q=what+are+you+working+on?+author:automoderator+&sort=new&restrict_sr=on&t=all][What - Are You Working On?]]. Hopefully these threads can last for years to - come. -- *[[simple-solution-lack-of-math-rendering][2018-05-02]]* - simple-solution-lack-of-math-rendering - <> - - The lack of maths rendering in major online communication platforms like - instant messaging, email or Github has been a minor obsession of mine - for quite a while, as I saw it as a big factor preventing people from - talking more maths online. But today I realised this is totally a - non-issue. Just do what people on IRC have been doing since the - inception of the universe: use a (latex) pastebin. -- *[[neural-networks-programming-paradigm][2018-05-01]]* - neural-networks-programming-paradigm - <> - - #+begin_quote - Neural networks are one of the most beautiful programming paradigms - ever invented. In the conventional approach to programming, we tell - the computer what to do, breaking big problems up into many small, - precisely defined tasks that the computer can easily perform. By - contrast, in a neural network we don't tell the computer how to solve - our problem. Instead, it learns from observational data, figuring out - its own solution to the problem at hand. - #+end_quote - - Michael Nielsen - - [[http://neuralnetworksanddeeplearning.com/about.html][What this book - (Neural Networks and Deep Learning) is about]] - - Unrelated to the quote, note that Nielsen's book is licensed under - [[https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/deed.en_GB][CC BY-NC]], - so one can build on it and redistribute non-commercially. -- *[[google-search-not-ai][2018-04-30]]* - google-search-not-ai - <> - - #+begin_quote - But, users have learned to accommodate to Google not the other way - around. We know what kinds of things we can type into Google and what - we can't and we keep our searches to things that Google is likely to - help with. We know we are looking for texts and not answers to start a - conversation with an entity that knows what we really need to talk - about. People learn from conversation and Google can't have one. It - can pretend to have one using Siri but really those conversations tend - to get tiresome when you are past asking about where to eat. - #+end_quote - - Roger Schank - - [[http://www.rogerschank.com/fraudulent-claims-made-by-IBM-about-Watson-and-AI][Fraudulent - claims made by IBM about Watson and AI]] -- *[[hacker-ethics][2018-04-06]]* - hacker-ethics - <> - - #+begin_quote - - - - Access to computers---and anything that might teach you something - about the way the world works---should be unlimited and total. - Always yield to the Hands-On Imperative! - - All information should be free. - - Mistrust Authority---Promote Decentralization. - - Hackers should be judged by their hacking, not bogus criteria such - as degrees, age, race, or position. - - You can create art and beauty on a computer. - - Computers can change your life for the better. - #+end_quote - - [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hacker_ethic][The Hacker Ethic]], - [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hackers:_Heroes_of_the_Computer_Revolution][Hackers: - Heroes of Computer Revolution]], by Steven Levy -- *[[static-site-generator][2018-03-23]]* - static-site-generator - <> - - #+begin_quote - "Static site generators seem like music databases, in that everyone - eventually writes their own crappy one that just barely scratches the - itch they had (and I'm no exception)." - #+end_quote - - __david__@hackernews - - So did I. \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/post-process.sh b/post-process.sh index 831c745..896a081 100755 --- a/post-process.sh +++ b/post-process.sh @@ -2,6 +2,10 @@ #!/bin/bash +# clean up generated sitemap files. +rm pages/{micro,}blog.org + +# fix absolute links mislabelled as file:// links for post in $(ls site/posts); do sed -i 's/src="file:\/\//src="/g' site/posts/$post sed -i 's/href="file:\/\//href="/g' site/posts/$post @@ -12,4 +16,5 @@ for page in $(ls site/pages); do sed -i 's/href="file:\/\//href="/g' site/pages/$page done +# fix email address. sed -i 's/xU)U1M2fEQL6bfYGpwSG/\h\i\@\y\p\e\i\.\m\e/' site/index.html -- cgit v1.2.3