Microsoft

Do a Maggie

Do a Maggie

The last post literally drove me crazy. Not because of the length, although writing a text of over three thousand words and twenty thousand characters in two different languages is no small feat. The real problem started when, at some point, the Markdown file of the Italian version of the post got corrupted. Whenever Hugo tried to convert it to HTML, the generated file showed the dreaded replacement character � instead of Italian accented letters. This is that black diamond with a white question mark inside that we have seen in tons of emails and web pages.
Phi-4 strikes back?

Phi-4 strikes back?

The conclusions of the post on Phi-4 left me stunned. How was it possible that a model like Phi-4 Reasoning Plus, which boasts an impressive 14.7 billion 4-bit parameters and was trained on scientific problems, particularly in mathematics, could have failed so badly? Comparing LLMs The question I asked Phi-4 Reasoning Plus was basic logic, a fourth-grade student could (and should) have answered it in 10 seconds. ChatGPT had no trouble at all and reasoned exactly as one would expect from the poor student.1
Phi-4, a Hamlet-like LLM

Phi-4, a Hamlet-like LLM

After two long months, I was once again able to play again with LM Studio, and this post was supposed to provide a live description of the responses of some models I had just installed. However, things got out of hand when the first model I put under the magnifying glass, Microsoft’s 4-bit Phi-4, started behaving in strange ways that were worth describing in detail. From that moment on, the post you’re about to read practically wrote itself!
50 years of Microsoft (plus one day)

50 years of Microsoft (plus one day)

– Paul Allen sitting at the teletype connected to the school computer, with a very young Bill Gates standing next to him. Source: Celebrate 50 Years of Microsoft Yesterday, despite the celebrations, I was a bit perfidious toward Microsoft. It must be said, though, that the celebratory piece written by Bill Gates for the 50th anniversary of his creature is beautiful. The text reveals nothing new, it’s all stuff well known to those who know a little about personal computing history, but the graphic realization is spectacular. Thanks to Bill for this beautiful gift!
50 years of Microsoft

50 years of Microsoft

Whether you Like it or not, Microsoft is the world’s largest software maker that, through methods both fair and questionable, has managed to get its products installed on the vast majority of computers on the planet. Today, Microsoft turns 50, and it feels like just yesterday when its two founders, Bill Gates and Paul Allen, assured Ed Roberts that they had a BASIC interpreter ready for his Altair 8800, the first truly personal computer, despite having never seen the Altair or the 8080 processor that powered it.