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Add evaluation results on the bazzhangz--sumdataset config and train split of bazzhangz/sumdataset (#3)
Browse files- Add evaluation results on the bazzhangz--sumdataset config and train split of bazzhangz/sumdataset (fabbffcffff85f560eebdf92b190ac6b208c7d15)
Co-authored-by: Evaluation Bot <autoevaluator@users.noreply.huggingface.co>
README.md
CHANGED
@@ -10,19 +10,190 @@ datasets:
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metrics:
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- rouge
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widget:
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- text:
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model-index:
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- name: MEETING_SUMMARY
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results:
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-
- task:
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name: Abstractive Text Summarization
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type: abstractive-text-summarization
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dataset:
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name:
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type: samsum
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metrics:
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- name: Validation ROGUE-1
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@@ -55,13 +226,46 @@ model-index:
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- name: Test ROGUE-Lsum
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type: gen-length
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value: 29.9951
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- name: MEETING_SUMMARY
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results:
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-
- task:
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name: Abstractive Text Summarization
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type: abstractive-text-summarization
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dataset:
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-
name:
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type: xsum
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metrics:
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- name: Validation ROGUE-1
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@@ -96,11 +300,11 @@ model-index:
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value: 31.9933
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- name: MEETING_SUMMARY
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results:
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-
- task:
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name: Abstractive Text Summarization
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type: abstractive-text-summarization
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dataset:
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-
name:
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type: dialogsum
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metrics:
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- name: Validation ROGUE-1
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metrics:
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- rouge
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widget:
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- text: 'Hi, I''m David and I''m supposed to be an industrial designer. Um, I just
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got the project announcement about what the project is. Designing a remote control.
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That''s about it, didn''t get anything else. Did you get the same thing? Cool.
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There''s too much gear. Okay. Can''t draw. Um. Yeah. Um, well anyway, I don''t
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know, it''s just the first animal I can think off the top of my head. Um. Yes.
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Big reason is ''cause I''m allergic to most animals. Allergic to animal fur, so
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um fish was a natural choice. Um, yeah, and I kind of like whales. They come in
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and go eat everything in sight. And they''re quite harmless and mild and interesting.
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Tail''s a bit big, I think. It''s an after dinner dog then. Hmm. It does make
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sense from maybe the design point of view ''cause you have more complicated characters
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like European languages, then you need more buttons. So, possibly. Hmm. Yeah.
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And you keep losing them. Finding them is really a pain, you know. I mean it''s
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usually quite small, or when you want it right, it slipped behind the couch or
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it''s kicked under the table. You know. Yep. Mm-hmm. I think one factor would
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be production cost. Because there''s a cap there, so um depends on how much you
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can cram into that price. Um. I think that that''s the main factor. Cool.
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Okay. Right. Um well this is the kick-off meeting for our our project. Um and
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um this is just what we''re gonna be doing over the next twenty five minutes.
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Um so first of all, just to kind of make sure that we all know each other, I''m
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Laura and I''m the project manager. Do you want to introduce yourself again? Okay.
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Great. Okay. Um so we''re designing a new remote control and um Oh I have to record
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who''s here actually. So that''s David, Andrew and Craig, isn''t it? And you all
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arrived on time. Um yeah so des uh design a new remote control. Um, as you can
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see it''s supposed to be original, trendy and user friendly. Um so that''s kind
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of our our brief, as it were. Um and so there are three different stages to the
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design. Um I''m not really sure what what you guys have already received um in
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your emails. What did you get? Mm-hmm. Is that what everybody got? Okay. Um. So
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we''re gonna have like individual work and then a meeting about it. And repeat
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that process three times. Um and at this point we get try out the whiteboard over
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there. Um. So uh you get to draw your favourite animal and sum up your favourite
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characteristics of it. So who would like to go first? Very good. Mm-hmm. Yeah.
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Yeah. Right. Lovely. Right. You can take as long over this as you like, because
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we haven''t got an awful lot to discuss. Ok oh we do we do. Don''t feel like you''re
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in a rush, anyway. Ach why not We might have to get you up again then. I don''t
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know what mine is. I''m gonna have to think on the spot now. Is that a whale?
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Ah. Okay. God, I still don''t know what I''m gonna write about. Um. I was gonna
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choose a dog as well. But I''ll just draw a different kind of dog. M my favourite
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animal is my own dog at home. Um That doesn''t really look like him, actually.
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He looks more like a pig, actually. Ah well. Do you? Oh that''s very good of you.
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Uh. Um he''s a mixture of uh various things. Um and what do I like about him,
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um That''s just to suggest that his tail wags. Um he''s very friendly and cheery
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and always pleased to see you, and very kind of affectionate and um uh and he''s
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quite quite wee as well so you know he can doesn''t take up too much space. Um
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and uh And he does a funny thing where he chases his tail as well, which is quite
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amusing, so It is. I think it is. He only does it after he''s had his dinner and
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um he''ll just all of a sudden just get up and start chasing his tail ''round
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the living room. Yeah, so uh Yeah, maybe. Maybe. Right, um where did you find
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this? Just down here? Yeah. Okay. Um what are we doing next? Uh um. Okay, uh we
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now need to discuss the project finance. Um so according to the brief um we''re
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gonna be selling this remote control for twenty five Euro, um and we''re aiming
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to make fifty million Euro. Um so we''re gonna be selling this on an international
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scale. And uh we don''t want it to cost any more than uh twelve fifty Euros, so
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fifty percent of the selling price. Sure. All together. Um I dunno. I imagine
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That''s a good question. I imagine it probably is our sale actually because it''s
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probably up to the the um the retailer to uh sell it for whatever price they want.
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Um. But I I don''t know, I mean do you think the fact that it''s going to be sold
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internationally will have a bearing on how we design it at all? Think it will?
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Um. Hmm. Oh yeah, regions and stuff, yeah. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. Well for a remote
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control, do you think that will be I suppose it''s depends on how complicated
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our remote control is. Yeah, yeah. Okay. What, just like in terms of like the
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wealth of the country? Like how much money people have to spend on things like?
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Aye, I see what you mean, yeah. Marketing. Good marketing thoughts. Oh gosh, I
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should be writing all this down. Um. Mm. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. Like how much does,
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you know, a remote control cost. Well twenty five Euro, I mean that''s um that''s
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about like eighteen pounds or something, isn''t it? Or no, is it as much as that?
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Sixteen seventeen eighteen pounds. Um, I dunno, I''ve never bought a remote control,
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so I don''t know how how good a remote control that would get you. Um. But yeah,
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I suppose it has to look kind of cool and gimmicky. Um right, okay. Let me just
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scoot on ahead here. Okay. Um well d Does anybody have anything to add to uh to
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the finance issue at all? Thin No, actually. That would be useful, though, wouldn''t
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it, if you knew like what your money would get you now. Mm-hmm. Yeah, yeah. Oh.
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Five minutes to end of meeting. Oh, okay. We''re a bit behind. Yeah. Right, so
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do you think that should be like a main design aim of our remote control d you
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know, do your your satellite and your regular telly and your V_C_R_ and everything?
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Mm-hmm. Yeah. Or even like, you know, notes about um what you wanna watch. Like
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you might put in there oh I want to watch such and such and look a Oh that''s
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a good idea. So extra functionalities. Mm-hmm. Hmm. Um okay, uh I''d wel we''re
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gonna have to wrap up pretty quickly in the next couple of minutes. Um I''ll just
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check we''ve nothing else. Okay. Um so anything else anybody wants to add about
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what they don''t like about remote controls they''ve used, what they would really
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like to be part of this new one at all? You keep losing them. Okay. Yeah. W You
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get those ones where you can, if you like, whistle or make a really high pitched
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noise they beep. There I mean is that something we''d want to include, do you
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think? Dunno. Okay maybe. My goodness. Still feels quite primitive. Maybe like
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a touch screen or something? Okay. Uh-huh, okay. Well I guess that''s up to our
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industrial designer. It looks better. Yeah. Okay. Okay. Right, well um so just
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to wrap up, the next meeting''s gonna be in thirty minutes. So that''s about um
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about ten to twelve by my watch. Um so inbetween now and then, um as the industrial
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designer, you''re gonna be working on you know the actual working design of it
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so y you know what you''re doing there. Um for user interface, technical functions,
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I guess that''s you know like what we''ve been talking about, what it''ll actually
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do. Um and uh marketing executive, you''ll be just thinking about what it actually
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what, you know, what requirements it has to has to fulfil and you''ll all get
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instructions emailed to you, I guess. Um. Yeah, so it''s th the functional design
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stage is next, I guess. And uh and that''s the end of the meeting. So I got that
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little message a lot sooner than I thought I would, so Mm-hmm. Uh-huh, yeah. Th
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Okay, well just very quickly ''cause this we''re supposed to finish now. Um I
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guess that''s up to us, I mean you probably want some kind of unique selling point
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of it, so um, you know Yeah. Mm-hmm. Yeah. Okay. Right, okay, we''ll that''s that''s
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the end of the meeting, then. Um. So, uh thank you all for coming.
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Um I''m Craig and I''m User Interface. Yeah. Well, my favourite animal would be
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a monkey. Then they''re small cute and furry, and uh when planet of the apes becomes
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real, I''m gonna be up there with them. Yeah. I know um My parents went out and
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bought um remote controls because um they got fed up of having four or five different
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remote controls for each things the house. So um for them it was just how many
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devices control. Uh.
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Mm-hmm. Great. And I''m Andrew and I''m uh our marketing expert. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
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Yeah, that''s that''s it. Yeah. I will go. That''s fine. Alright. So This one
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here, right? Okay. Very nice. Alright. My favourite animal is like A beagle. Um
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charac favourite characteristics of it? Is that right? Uh, right, well basically
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um high priority for any animal for me is that they be willing to take a lot of
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physical affection from their family. And, yeah that they have lots of personality
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and uh be fit and in robust good health. So this is blue. Blue beagle. My family''s
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beagle. I coulda told you a whole lot more about beagles. Boy, let me tell you.
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Impressionist. Alright. Mm. Superb sketch, by the way. Yep. I see a dog in there.
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Yep. Now I see a rooster. What kind is it? Is he aware that th it''s his own cha
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tail he''s chasing? Hmm. Probably when he was little he got lots of attention
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for doing it and has forever been conditioned. ''Kay. Um, can we just go over
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that again? Uh, so bas at twel Alright, yeah. Okay. So cost like production cost
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is twelve fifty, but selling price is is that wholesale or retail? Like on the
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shelf. Our sale our sale anyway. Yeah, okay okay. Okay. Mm-hmm. Alright. Yes.
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Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Well right away I''m wondering if there''s um th th uh, like with
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D_V_D_ players, if there are zones. Um f frequencies or something um as well as
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uh characters, um different uh keypad styles and s symbols. Um. I don''t know.
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Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And then a and then al the other thing international is on top
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of the price. I''m thinking the price might might appeal to a certain market in
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one region, whereas in another it''ll be different, so Just a chara just a characteristic
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of the Just Or just like, basic product podi positioning, the twenty five Euro
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remote control might be a big hit in London, might not be such a big hit in Greece,
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who knows, something like that, yeah. Yep. Right away I''m making some kind of
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assumptions about what what information we''re given here, thinking, ''kay trendy
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probably means something other than just basic, something other than just standard.
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Um so I''m wondering right away, is selling twenty five Euros, is that sort of
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the thi is this gonna to be like the premium product kinda thing or Uh-huh. Mm-hmm.
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Yep. Yeah, I''d say so, yeah. No. Yeah, yeah. Mm-hmm. Do we have any other background
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information on like how that compares to other other Yeah. Mm-hmm. Yeah, interesting
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thing about discussing um production of a remote control for me is that l as you
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point out, I just don''t think of remote controls as somethin something people
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consciously assess in their purchasing habits. It''s just like getting shoelaces
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with shoes or something. It just comes along. Do you know what I mean? Like so
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sort of like how do you I I mean one one way of looking at it would be, well the
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people producing television sets, maybe they have to buy remote controls. Or another
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way is maybe people who have T_V_ sets are really fed up with their remote control
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and they really want a better one or something. But Right. Right. Okay so Right,
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so in function one of the priorities might be to combine as many uses I think
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so. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Well like um, maybe what we could use is a sort of like
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a example of a successful other piece technology is palm palm pilots. They''re
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gone from being just like little sort of scribble boards to cameras, M_P_ three
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players, telephones, everything, agenda. So, like, I wonder if we might add something
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new to the to the remote control market, such as the lighting in your house, or
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um Yeah, yeah. An Yeah. Like, p personally for me, at home I''ve I''ve combined
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the um the audio video of my television set and my D_V_D_ player and my C_D_ player.
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So they w all work actually function together but I have different remote controls
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for each of them. So it''s sort of ironic that that then they''re in there um
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you know, the sound and everything it''s just one system. But each one''s got
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its own little part. Mm. Mm. Mm. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Yeah. Yeah. That''s just really
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good id Yep. Uh, sure. I remember when the first remote control my my family had
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was on a cable. Actually had a cable between it and the T_V_ and big like buttons
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that sort of like, like on a blender or something. And um, you know, when I think
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about what they are now, it''s better, but actually it''s still kind of, I dunno,
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like a massive junky thing on the table. Maybe we could think about how, could
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be more, you know, streamlined. S Something like that, yeah. Or whatever would
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be technologically reasonable. ''Cause it could b it could it could be that f
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it could be that functionally that doesn''t make it any better, but that just
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the appeal of of not having You know, these days there''s a r pe things in people''s
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homes are becoming more and more like chic, you know. Um, nicer materials and
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might be be worth exploring anyway. Okay. Um. Before we wrap up, just to make
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sure we''re all on the same page here, um, do we We were given sort of an example
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of a coffee machine or something, right? Well, um are we at ma right now on the
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assumption that our television remote control may have features which go beyond
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the television? Or are we keeping sort of like a a design commitment to television
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features? I I don''t know. Yep. Yeah, sure. Okay. Okay, yeah. Okay. Okay. Okay.
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Alright.'
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model-index:
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- name: MEETING_SUMMARY
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results:
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+
- task:
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name: Abstractive Text Summarization
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type: abstractive-text-summarization
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dataset:
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name: samsum
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type: samsum
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metrics:
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- name: Validation ROGUE-1
|
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- name: Test ROGUE-Lsum
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type: gen-length
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value: 29.9951
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+
- task:
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type: summarization
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name: Summarization
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dataset:
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name: bazzhangz/sumdataset
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type: bazzhangz/sumdataset
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config: bazzhangz--sumdataset
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split: train
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metrics:
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- name: ROUGE-1
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type: rouge
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value: 40.5544
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verified: true
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242 |
+
- name: ROUGE-2
|
243 |
+
type: rouge
|
244 |
+
value: 17.0751
|
245 |
+
verified: true
|
246 |
+
- name: ROUGE-L
|
247 |
+
type: rouge
|
248 |
+
value: 32.153
|
249 |
+
verified: true
|
250 |
+
- name: ROUGE-LSUM
|
251 |
+
type: rouge
|
252 |
+
value: 36.4277
|
253 |
+
verified: true
|
254 |
+
- name: loss
|
255 |
+
type: loss
|
256 |
+
value: 2.116729736328125
|
257 |
+
verified: true
|
258 |
+
- name: gen_len
|
259 |
+
type: gen_len
|
260 |
+
value: 42.1978
|
261 |
+
verified: true
|
262 |
- name: MEETING_SUMMARY
|
263 |
results:
|
264 |
+
- task:
|
265 |
name: Abstractive Text Summarization
|
266 |
type: abstractive-text-summarization
|
267 |
dataset:
|
268 |
+
name: xsum
|
269 |
type: xsum
|
270 |
metrics:
|
271 |
- name: Validation ROGUE-1
|
|
|
300 |
value: 31.9933
|
301 |
- name: MEETING_SUMMARY
|
302 |
results:
|
303 |
+
- task:
|
304 |
name: Abstractive Text Summarization
|
305 |
type: abstractive-text-summarization
|
306 |
dataset:
|
307 |
+
name: dialogsum
|
308 |
type: dialogsum
|
309 |
metrics:
|
310 |
- name: Validation ROGUE-1
|