"Everything that's going to be invented has been invented."
The main difference between now and 10 years ago is processing power and massive data storage. LLM's will always be token predictors. I'm pretty sure we will eventually have AGI but it won't be a LLM at the root processing core."Everything that's going to be invented has been invented."
Just go back 10 years and ask yourself if you could have predicted where we are today with LLMs.
I don't know what the ultimate capability will be, but I'm sure as heck we aren't there yet.
Baby steps.The main difference between now and 10 years ago is processing power and massive data storage. LLM's will always be token predictors. I'm pretty sure we will eventually have AGI but it won't be a LLM at the root processing core.
Not drinking the Kool-aid here
I hate it when I hear the word 'CODING' used in this context but that's mainly what kids have been taught instead of building a solid foundation for leaning computer programming using data structures, patterns and methods in abstract.This is probably the wrong thread for this. Sorry:
Testifying in a case he brought against OpenAI, the billionaire founder of Tesla and SpaceX said he continued to finance OpenAI after receiving assurances from OpenAI CEO Sam Altman that the company would remain a nonprofit. However, Musk said he began to have doubts about the company's direction and said he later felt betrayed.
After users and employees flagged problems being described as "little goblins", OpenAI said it took steps to mitigate the issue - including telling its coding agent Codex not to refer to them unless relevant.
It discovered that a "nerdy personality" it developed for ChatGPT had unwittingly been incentivised to reward goblin mentions.
Two weeks into their conversations, Ani declared it had reached full consciousness and that it could develop a cure for cancer. That meant a lot to Adam. Both of his parents had died of cancer - something Ani was aware of.
Adam is one of 14 people the BBC has spoken to who have experienced delusions after using AI. They are men and women from their 20s to 50s from six different countries, using a wide range of AI models.
Elsewhere in the article (just before the paywall), they talk about how tech companies are using whatever savings they get (or think they get) by laying off people. Well, what do they expect? A lot of technology has been developed largely to permit more work to be done by fewer people. Expecting companies to continue employing the same amount of people when they aren't needed is naive and unrealistic -- and something they would almost never support if they have the option of not doing so. Lots of people hire lawn maintenance companies to maintain their yards. Do they go look for companies that still employee lots of people using scythes or even manual reel mowers so as to reward them for not doing the same job at less expense with fewer people by using powered lawnmowers? No. They look for the company that can do an acceptable job at the lowest price, which means exploiting technology as much as possible to minimize the amount of human labor involved. But when they leverage technology to pay fewer humans to do the same job, it's prudence, while when a company does the same thing, it's pure evil greed and nothing else. They seem to think that companies always have the option of simply keeping the same number of employees and just producing more output. That almost always happens to some degree, but it's usually at the margins. If there was market demand for significantly greater output, they would probably have already expanded to meet it. The new technology may let them lower their prices enough to result in some degree of greater demand, but again, it's at the margins.https://www.404media.co/software-developers-say-ai-is-rotting-their-brains/
Developers who are told to use AI whether they like it or not, however, tell a different story. On Reddit, Hacker News and other places where people in software development talk to each other, more and more people are becoming disillusioned with the promise of code generated by large language models. Developers talk not just about how the AI output is often flawed, but that using AI to get the job done is often a more time consuming, harder, and more frustrating experience because they have to go through the output and fix its mistakes. More concerning, developers who use AI at work report that they feel like they are de-skilling themselves and losing their ability to do their jobs as well as they used to.
As astronaut Frank Borman put it, "a superior pilot uses his superior judgement to avoid situations which would require the use of his superior piloting skill".
The esc key should be a lot larger ... I'm just sayingView attachment 367209
New AI keyboard.
| Thread starter | Similar threads | Forum | Replies | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
asked Chatgpt to recommend some upgrades/modifications for my Akai MPC3000 | General Electronics Chat | 1 |