Dwarkesh is like an insightful version of Lex Fridman who doesn't have to try to make his observations and questions sound deep.
@2394098234509
Ай бұрын
Dwarkesh also actually understands the subject matter and respects his audience. Dwarkesh and Lex are not even in the same league
@itsnionel
Ай бұрын
Two absolute GIGACHADS! Thanks for this!
@adityakaul8065
Ай бұрын
super helpful to see how Dwarkesh preps for his interviews, imbibes knowledge and uses Claude and other tools to make the process much more efficient. Now I want to go back to my book shelf, create a bunch of Claude projects and then re-grok them. I already have started doing something similar with Iain M Banks Culture novels and also built a Startup Mentor using books of Ben Horowitz, Thiel etc. I think there is a lot of value in mixing up books from different genres, finding threads etc. For example I have tried to find similarities between Balaji S's Network State and David Graeber's Dawn of Everything..as they both talk about decentralisation, one in the future and the other in the past.
@BrianMosleyUK
2 ай бұрын
Stay curious Dwarkesh, love your energy 🙏👍
@RayToth
2 ай бұрын
Another awesome episode! AI&I has rapidly become my favorite podcast/KZitem video series - keep it up
@gerardkrupke2235
Ай бұрын
Extremely insightful conversation and so many impactful ways to use AI models to enhance our thinking and planning. Especially loved showcasing Mochi and stressing the importance of spaced repetition!
@aviraltripathi9232
Ай бұрын
Comment for the algorithm,. Great content. The quest to learn everything could be a good phrase that can describe the modern human being
@davdfranzen
2 ай бұрын
I saw you mention on Twitter, Dan, that you were writing a blog post about how you're using Claude when reading books. Is that article published yet, or are you still working on it?
@mikestaub
Ай бұрын
I highly recommend reading "Mental Models I Find Repeatedly Useful" by Gabriel Weinberg
@TheStonedPhilosopher47
Ай бұрын
This was really cool and helpful, thanks👍
@arinco3817
2 ай бұрын
It's so interesting how spaced repitition is similar to a fine tune dataset for our brains lol. But makes me wonder if we could teach llms with spaced repitition also?
@BrianMosleyUK
2 ай бұрын
I want you to read this section of my book, and break it down into interesting and logically progressing concepts. For each concept, given all the quotes you know, create a unique, original, powerful, inspiring and insightful quote which encapsulates the concept.
@joaoalexandre1796
2 ай бұрын
Cool prompt.
@BrianMosleyUK
Ай бұрын
You can also modify with : For each concept, given all the quotes you know by Mother Teresa, create... ... which encapsulates the concept in the same voice.
@chriscollins2073
Ай бұрын
Can Dwarkesh make his huggingface space public?
@DelandaBaudLacanian
2 ай бұрын
Dwarkesh Superchad Patel
@rjiylm
28 күн бұрын
Great video, thanks. What is the online service Dwarkesh uses for converting an epub file to text ?
@tim-finnigan
Ай бұрын
Very interesting to see how Dwarkesh uses AI to help prepare for interviews. I'm not sure if the on-the-fly prompting parts are the best suited for a podcast though. Some of that can be interesting but can also start to feel more like a livestream.
@cuentadeyoutube5903
Ай бұрын
Interestingly, I tried to do this with the book Atomic Habits (Spanish edition) that I’m currently reading and it filled my project completely
@zumatse
Ай бұрын
Any one has Dwarkesh spaced repetition prompt as huggingface link doesn't work anymore?
@mauricioalfaro9406
Ай бұрын
Never start with an ad!!
@johnexley.family
2 ай бұрын
Oh this is about to be the one
@holdingW0
Ай бұрын
Great conversation! If anyone has the full prompt Dwarkesh uses to create the spaced repetitions, i would love to see it. We only got to see part of it
@manuelmao4700
Ай бұрын
Generate spaced repetition prompts from the text at the very end using the following guidance: Spaced repetition prompts should be focused. A question or answer involving too much detail will dull your concentration and stimulate incomplete retrievals, leaving some bulbs unlit. Unfocused questions also make it harder to check whether you remembered all parts of the answer and to note places where you differed. It’s usually best to focus on one detail at a time. Spaced repetition prompts should be precise about what they’re asking for. Vague questions will elicit vague answers, which won’t reliably light the bulbs you’re targeting. Spaced repetition prompts should produce consistent answers, lighting the same bulbs each time you perform the task. Otherwise, you may run afoul of an interference phenomenon called "retrieval-induced forgetting": what you remember during practice is reinforced, but other related knowledge which you didn't recall is actually inhibited. Now, there is a useful type of prompt which involves generating new answers with each repetition, but such prompts leverage a different theory of change. We'll discuss them briefly later in this guide. Spaced repetition prompts should be tractable. To avoid interference-driven churn and recurring annoyance in your review sessions, you should strive to write prompts which you can almost always answer correctly. This often means breaking the task down, or adding cues. Spaced repetition prompts should be effortful. It's important that the prompt actually involves retrieving the answer from memory. You shouldn't be able to trivially infer the answer. Cues are helpful, as we'll discuss later-just don't "give the answer away." In fact, effort appears to be an important factor in the effects of retrieval practice. That's one motivation for spacing reviews out over time: if it's too easy to recall the answer, retrieval practice has little effect. Output question answer pairs like so: Why did blah blah blah? --- Because blah blah blah. How big was xyz? --- abc.
@holdingW0
Ай бұрын
@@manuelmao4700 nice one. I fed Andy matyushaks article about spaced repetition into Claude and had it generate a system prompt for me.
@HaiHoang-dd8co
Ай бұрын
What is the Card Dashboard Patel using?
@InacioInvita
Ай бұрын
The author mentioned is Peter Watson, not Jackson fyi
@ChinaTalkMedia
2 ай бұрын
great ep!! this is annoying feedback but can you get the microwave to stop blinking?
@kentonparton
Ай бұрын
Doesn't Descript do a lot of the podcast operations functionality? Or are there still quite a few things missing?
@hypercube717
2 ай бұрын
Interesting
@11tanzim
Ай бұрын
I did now know I could upload EPUBs to Claude/CGPT ... Damn
@vdovindiman
Ай бұрын
Problem with key points extraction is like, why even bother with writing full articles in the first place? And you can always extract key points from "key points" text indefinetly with ai tools. Who's even going to bother to write stuff themselves?
@johnny1tap
Ай бұрын
Wait you have a white background and approximately 9 books in the background too?! let's do a podcast.
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