I have been thinking a lot lately about “diachronic AI” and “vintage LLMs” — language models designed to index a particular slice of historical sources rather than to hoover up all data available. I’ll have more to say about this in a future post, but one thing that came to mind while writing this one is the point made by AI safety researcher Owain Evans about how such models could be trained:
Thanks to Steven Forsythe for sharing a report on the use of agar seaweed in Britain during WWII, Barbara Buchberger at the Robert Koch Institute for pointing out Koch’s use of gelatine for the identification of cholera, and the surviving relative of Fanny Angelina Hesse for sharing a trove of unpublished material.
,更多细节参见搜狗输入法2026
坚持精准方略,找对路子,让发展成为消除贫困最有效的办法。。同城约会是该领域的重要参考
Accept and continue
Lydic noted that usually you'd think "a batch of missing files linking the president to international sex crimes would be the main story on any network" but pointed to conservative media sites, which have instead blown up "a story even more disturbing and explosive."