143 points by growingswe 13 hours ago | 8 comments
politelemon 2 hours ago
> By the end of training, the model produces names like "kamon", "karai", "anna", and "anton". None of them are copies from the dataset.

Hey, I am able to see kamon, karai, anna, and anton in the dataset, it'd be worth using some other names: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/karpathy/makemore/988aa59/...

ayhanfuat 1 hour ago
You are absolutely right. The whole post reads like AI generated.
jsheard 1 hour ago
The rate they are posting new articles on random subjects is also a pretty indicative of a content mill.

In 3 days they've covered machine learning, geometry, cryptography, file formats and directory services.

re 1 hour ago
I didn't get that sense from the prose; it didn't have the usual LLM hallmarks to me, though I'm not enough of an expert in the space to pick up on inaccuracies/hallucinations.

The "TRAINING" visualization does seem synthetic though, the graph is a bit too "perfect" and it's odd that the generated names don't update for every step.

butterisgood 1 hour ago
ISWYDT
1 hour ago
growingswe 1 hour ago
Thanks, will fix
love2read 14 minutes ago
Is it becoming a thing to misspell and add grammatical mistakes on purpose to show that an LLM didn't write the blog post? I noticed several spelling mistakes in Karpathy's blog post that this article is based on and in this article.
klysm 7 minutes ago
I expect this kind of counter signaling to become more common in the coming years.
malnourish 1 hour ago
I read through this entire article. There was some value in it, but I found it to be very "draw the rest of the owl". It read like introductions to conceptual elements or even proper segues had been edited out. That said, I appreciated the interactive components.
davidw 26 minutes ago
It started off nicely but before long you get

"The MLP (multilayer perceptron) is a two-layer feed-forward network: project up to 64 dimensions, apply ReLU (zero out negatives), project back to 16"

Which starts to feel pretty owly indeed.

I think the whole thing could be expanded to cover some more of it in greater depth.

grey-area 30 minutes ago
The original article from Karpathy: https://karpathy.github.io/2026/02/12/microgpt/
jmkd 29 minutes ago
It says its tailored for beginners, but I don't know what kind of beginner can parse multiple paragraphs like this:

"How wrong was the prediction? We need a single number that captures "the model thought the correct answer was unlikely." If the model assigns probability 0.9 to the correct next token, the loss is low (0.1). If it assigns probability 0.01, the loss is high (4.6). The formula is − log ⁡ ( � ) −log(p) where � p is the probability the model assigned to the correct token. This is called cross-entropy loss."

windowshopping 1 hour ago
The part that eludes me is how you get from this to the capability to debug arbitrary coding problems. How does statistical inference become reasoning?

For a long time, it seemed the answer was it doesn't. But now, using Claude code daily, it seems it does.

ferris-booler 16 minutes ago
IMO your question is the largest unknown in the ML research field (neural net interpretability is a related area), but the most basic explanation is "if we can always accurately guess the next 'correct' word, then we will always answer questions correctly".

An enormous amount of research+eng work (most of the work of frontier labs) is being poured into making that 'correct' modifier happen, rather than just predicting the next token from 'the internet' (naive original training corpus). This work takes the form of improved training data (e.g. expert annotations), human-feedback finetuning (e.g. RLHF), and most recently reinforcement learning (e.g. RLVR, meaning RL with verifiable rewards), where the model is trained to find the correct answer to a problem without 'token-level guidance'. RL for LLMs is a very hot research area and very tricky to solve correctly.

fc417fc802 19 minutes ago
Because it's not statistical inference on words or characters but rather stacked layers of statistical inference on ~arbitrarily complex semantic concepts which is then performed recursively.
ChrisArchitect 25 minutes ago
nimbus-hn-test 2 hours ago
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