But this is the No Free Lunch right there.

On Sun, 27 Sep 2020, 20:05 Matt Mahoney <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> On Sun, Sep 27, 2020, 1:41 PM Danko Nikolic <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> I see the no free lunch theorem striking every day. Every time we pick
>> one ML architecture for one type of problem and another architecture for
>> another type of problem, it is the No Free Lunch Theorem dictating the fact
>> that we have to make thos chices and are not able to have one the same
>> architecture for all kinds of problems.
>>
>
> There is no simple, universal prediction algorithm. Suppose you have one.
> Then I can create a simple sequence that you can't predict. My program runs
> a copy of your program and outputs the opposite of your prediction.
>
> The best compressors have lots of code to handle lots of rare, special
> cases. It's not because of the no free lunch theorem. It's because you can
> always find something that your program can't compress, and you have to add
> yet another special case.
>
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