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I often hear older academics talking about the times before the internet, saying things like, 'Do you remember when we had to rely on books from libraries that were barely available? And yet, we managed to get our work done. It’s hard to imagine working like that again, right?' I think AIs represent a similar transformative leap as the internet did. In just a few years, people will likely be equally baffled at how they managed to work without the assistance of AI. When I bought MathGPT, I was like, 'where have you been all my life?'
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Schools and Universities are going to have to phase out homework and take-home assignments immediately, if they haven't already, now that these LLM's can produce essay length answers in seconds. I always preferred exams anyway.
Spoiler!
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Already as realisitic as it will ever get
More seriously, despite Moore's law being in bad shape now, there are other ways to innovate. For AI, training is as important, or more, than stacking new transistors. Just like our brains don't have that much computational power compared to chips but it has been very trained and optimized for pattern recognitions etc.. through millions of years. It's some sort of SoC with extremely customized operating system.
Last edited by Petalpusher; 05-21-2024 at 09:10 AM.
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