a singularity is a period of time during which the world's second derivative experiences an inflection point, making it effectively impossible to predict the future using cached heuristics learned from the past
if the rate of change of the rate of change is changing, ur in one
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RT @sama
Don't think there have ever been more simultaneous technological revolutions going on than right now.
https://twitter.com/sama/status/1465429134130040839
since sampling, by definition, produces a discrete timeseries of values, we can measure the differences btwn subsequent samples to identify the distribution of delta sizes over time, which then allows us to identify outlier deltas, indicating that the system is changing unusually
oh and credit is due to @robinhanson for getting me to think about this idea in a much more useful way than any I'd heard previously
by measuring change in this distribution over time, we can determine the rate of change of the rate of change, which allows us to identify said time periods
ofc, arriving at a result is much simpler than arriving at a meaningful result; it's non-obvious which systems to sample