{ "config": { "query_token_id": "[unused0]", "doc_token_id": "[unused1]", "query_token": "[Q]", "doc_token": "[D]", "ncells": null, "centroid_score_threshold": null, "ndocs": null, "load_index_with_mmap": false, "index_path": null, "nbits": 2, "kmeans_niters": 4, "resume": false, "similarity": "cosine", "bsize": 64, "accumsteps": 1, "lr": 1e-5, "maxsteps": 400000, "save_every": null, "warmup": 20000, "warmup_bert": null, "relu": false, "nway": 64, "use_ib_negatives": true, "reranker": false, "distillation_alpha": 1.0, "ignore_scores": false, "model_name": null, "query_maxlen": 32, "attend_to_mask_tokens": false, "interaction": "colbert", "dim": 128, "doc_maxlen": 300, "mask_punctuation": true, "checkpoint": "colbert-ir\/colbertv2.0", "triples": "\/future\/u\/okhattab\/root\/unit\/experiments\/2021.10\/downstream.distillation.round2.2_score\/round2.nway6.cosine.ib\/examples.64.json", "collection": [ "list with 268881 elements starting with...", [ "In my experience rabbits are very easy to housebreak. They like to pee and poop in the same place every time, so in most cases all you have to do is put a little bit of their waste in the litter box and they will happily use the litter box. It is very important that if they go somewhere else, miss the edge or kick waste out of the box that you clean it up well and immediately as otherwise those spots will become existing places to pee and poop. When you clean the box, save a little bit of waste and put it in the cleaned box so it smells right to them. For a more foolproof method, you can get a piece of wood soaked with their urine and put that in the box along with droppings or cage them so that they are only in their litter box for a week. Generally, if I try the first method and find that they are not using only the box on the first day, I go for the litter box only for a week method. The wood block works well if you are moving from a hutch outdoors to a litter box indoors. If you have an indoor cage, you can use the cage itself as the litter box (or attach a litter box to the section of the cage the rabbit has used for waste.) Be sure to use clay or newsprint litter as the other types aren't necessarily good for rabbits. Wood litter is okay if you are sure it isn't fir. The most important thing is to clean anywhere they have an accident. High sided boxes help with avoiding kicking soiled litter out of the box, which is the biggest cause of failure in my experience.", "...rabbits can be easily trained to use a litter tray, sometimes with more reliability than your average cat! The natural instinct of a wild rabbit to use one area as its latrine is still apparent in its domestic counterparts. (1) The actual process is very similar to pad training a dog or litter box training a cat. Keep the rabbit confined to a small area while training, move any \"accidents\" to the litter box, and the rabbit will naturally start using that area for its business. The source link has the details. (1) Litter Training Your Rabbit Emma Magnus MSc Association of Pet Behaviour Counsellors apbc.org.uk", "It could be a multitude of things. Lack of exercise plays a big role in how your dog acts. If they have a lot of unused energy, they're more likely to act up. Giving him treats or praise will encourage the behavior you're trying to prevent. You want to refrain from treats or praise until he's doing what you want him to do. In the mean time, make it clear to him what you want. You want to be the focus of his attention when you come across a child or another dog. You can do this by keeping him right next to you (never in front of you) by using a short leash. If he tries to pull, tilt the leash upwards. Doing so creates unusual pressure on the bottom of his neck, causing him to look up and see what's going on. If he still won't turn his attention to you, you can forcefully nudge him with the side of your leg until he yields. I've found with my dog sometimes I have to step in front of her and hold her muzzle, forcing her to look at me. It's also important that you remain calm. It's easy to get upset and dogs have the ability of reading our emotions. If you're tense and angry, he'll start tune you out. Source: personal experience with my black lab guided by insight from Cesar Millan" ] ], "queries": "\/future\/u\/okhattab\/data\/MSMARCO\/queries.train.tsv", "index_name": "lifestyle.dev.2bits", "overwrite": false, "root": "\/future\/u\/hichews\/home\/2024-win\/ColBERT\/experiments", "experiment": "notebook", "index_root": null, "name": "2024-05\/10\/13.43.45", "rank": 0, "nranks": 1, "amp": true, "gpus": 4, "avoid_fork_if_possible": false }, "num_chunks": 11, "num_partitions": 65536, "num_embeddings_est": 40738277.81414795, "avg_doclen_est": 151.51043701171875 }