Hi John, I think I remember that presentation—the reason the graph there was quite bimodal is because the Lifetime Anchor I was using at the time was simply assuming ~1x human lifetime levels of computation. In the current model, I’m assuming ~1000x human lifetime levels of computation, because ~1x seemed like a much less likely version of that anchor. The code in the quantitative model will let you see the untruncated version of the distribution, and it looks a lot more smooth now, though still a modest bump.
Also, apologies for such a late reply, I don’t get email notifications for comments and haven’t been checking regularly!
Hi John, I think I remember that presentation—the reason the graph there was quite bimodal is because the Lifetime Anchor I was using at the time was simply assuming ~1x human lifetime levels of computation. In the current model, I’m assuming ~1000x human lifetime levels of computation, because ~1x seemed like a much less likely version of that anchor. The code in the quantitative model will let you see the untruncated version of the distribution, and it looks a lot more smooth now, though still a modest bump.
Also, apologies for such a late reply, I don’t get email notifications for comments and haven’t been checking regularly!
Thanks, that makes sense.