My wife’s Yorkie once chased a mouse into a kitchen cupboard. After moving apartments and a decade later, if you asked him “where’s the mouse?” He’d run to the kitchen and stare at the cupboards
No poweruser, no moderator, can hold an imprisoned meme source by force of arms forever. There is no greater power in the universe than the need for memes. Against that power, governments and tyrants and armies cannot stand. The online polls learned this lesson once. We will teach it to them again. Though it take a thousand years, we will be free.
That's not been my experience. It'll tend to be agreeable when I suggest architecture changes, or if I insist on some particular suboptimal design element, but if I tell it "this bit here isn't working" when it clearly isn't the real problem I've had it disagree with me and tell me what it thinks the bug is really caused by.
Models are geared towards seeking the best human response for answers, not necessarily the answers themselves. Its first answer is based on probability of autocompleting from a huge sample of data, and in versions that have a memory adjusts later responses to how well the human is accepting the answers. There is no actual processing of the answers, although that may be in the latest variations being worked on where there are components that cycle through hundreds of attempts of generations of a problem to try to verify and pick the best answers. Basically rather than spit out the first autocomplete answers, it has subprocessing to actually weed out the junk and narrow into a hopefully good result. Still not AGI, but it's more useful than the first LLMs.
I mean I can prolly only find fentanyl but you can cashapp me. I have a friend that would prolly be able to safely do the injections and I know when ff11 came out I stayed up all night playing wolf:et and then I drove to get my preorder I thought leaves blowing across the road were 'nades so there’s precedent that my brain can fuck up the way we want.
programming.dev
Active