Yann LeCun: Meta ‘fudged a little bit’ when benchmark-testing Llama 4 model

Yann LeCun, Meta’s outgoing chief AI scientist, says his employer tested its latest Llama model in a way that may have made the model look better than it really was.  In a recent Financial Times interview, LeCun says Meta researchers “fudged a little bit” by using different versions of Llama 4 Maverick and Llama 4ContinueContinue reading “Yann LeCun: Meta ‘fudged a little bit’ when benchmark-testing Llama 4 model”

AI could transform education . . . if universities stop responding like medieval guilds

When ChatGPT burst onto the scene, much of academia reacted not with curiosity but with fear. Not fear of what artificial intelligence might enable students to learn, but fear of losing control over how learning has traditionally been policed. Almost immediately, professors declared generative AI “poison,” warned that it would destroy critical thinking, and demandedContinueContinue reading “AI could transform education . . . if universities stop responding like medieval guilds”

First-Time Donor Retention: 3 Nonprofit Best Practices

Your nonprofit’s team likely spends quite a bit of time focusing on raising the funds you need to achieve your goals. There are many considerations to go over, including what types of campaigns to employ, what fundraising strategies to exercise during these campaigns, and what your revenue goals are.  However, during these discussions, many organizationsContinueContinue reading “First-Time Donor Retention: 3 Nonprofit Best Practices”

Your mind needs a training plan, here’s how to build one

It’s the first week of January, and you’re already drowning in Slack messages. You told yourself this year would be different, that you’d set boundaries and stop overcommitting. But here you are, saying yes to another meeting you don’t have time for, staying late to fix something that could wait, feeling that familiar knot inContinueContinue reading “Your mind needs a training plan, here’s how to build one”

Framing ADHD as a strength can lead to better mental health

Those with Attention Deficient Hyperactivity Disorder, better known as ADHD, often experience challenges that neurotypical people do not, such as distractibility or low frustration tolerance. However, there is a growing body of evidence that suggests that ADHD also has an upside. And, according to a new study, being aware of these positives may create someContinueContinue reading “Framing ADHD as a strength can lead to better mental health”

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