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by podocarp
15 days ago
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I think it's a perfectly fine one liner explanation.
If a kid asks why grass is green, do you stop explaining when you say chlorophyll is green, or do you go on to explain electron hybridization and all the spectra stuff, or do you go further to explain the structure of our eyes and why we perceive that reflected light as green? Also why green? Why not red? Do you have to explain that? It all depends on the audience, the context, and how much space you have to explain as well as how much you know.
For you and more experienced people of course this is not sufficient and so you need to know more being "predict tokens" and so that opens up follow up questions like "how does it do that". |
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