Yep. It's not my mom or dad, so whatever. Right?
Yep. It's not my mom or dad, so whatever. Right?
Sam Collins the tech guy on F1TV says the new AMR update is designed by CognizantAI. I speculated before that Mercedes dominated 14-21 due to a similar setup.zeph wrote: ↑17 Jun 2023, 23:29Sorry, didn't mean to criticize/accuse. We all have to try to make the best of the life we've been given. I certainly don't blame you for doing your job.Zynerji wrote: ↑16 Jun 2023, 14:44It's hard for me, but the only reason for a business to exist is to make profit. See the current Target and Budweiser stock debacle for reference.
And PS: If I found a human that could produce perfect work, hired them and fired those same 4 ladies, is it any different?
I'm a team guy. It's against my nature for this. But I cannot deny the improvements.
I'm waiting to train ChatGPT4 to do my admin/taxes for me, I'm not against ML/AI in principle. I see the potential and advantages on so many levels.
On a philosophical level, when AI does everything better than humans, what do we do exactly?
You'd throw your personal information at an uncontrolled third party just like that? What you send for learning is going to stay with them.
You should check out PrivateGPT.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑18 Jun 2023, 01:58You'd throw your personal information at an uncontrolled third party just like that? What you send for learning is going to stay with them.
Once AI and machines do better than humans, we can dump the whole concept of money and just enjoy life. The tech will produce the things we need, there will be no need to work.
Not wishing to sound like a Luddite, but…
I completely agree with you on the need for oversight, I simply wouldn't ban, and even slowing down development is risky on its own as it slows down understanding it. Usually after a beginning time of reduced employment, enough new opportunities come up that will need more employees, also I've founded a company that ended up having 700 employees, I never felt I had enough people, always wanted more, if I can make those I have more productive, I can do more things.Stu wrote:My concern is that with the capability of the technology evolving at a Moore’s Law rate, it only takes one genocidal lunatic to create a massive global problem (nuclear weaponry had/has the same potential - it is just far less accessible).
I know that I am looking at this very negatively, but with some things it seems to be fairly sensible to look at it from a ‘what is the worst outcome’…
Even looking at it from a positive perspective (performing tasks where a high level of accuracy - zero failure rate - is important; what jobs do those people then move into?
You end up in a society where a universal income becomes a prerequisite to survive day to day, which is fairly dark rabbit-hole from a socio-economic/political perspective.
At the risk of derailing the thread back to F1, can I ask where he said that? (And yes, you know that I will trash the quote if it turns out to have been plucked out of context).
The issue is how the systems are used by "bad people" in a way that "good people" are unable to tell truth from lie. Apply these tools to social media, etc., and you can set up narratives that lead entire nations down a particular political path.dialtone wrote: ↑18 Jun 2023, 10:24LLMs are not intelligent and neither is Machine Learning in general. They are probabilistic models about what happened in their training data. Reasoning is currently not among the possibilities for ML.
They have no ability to solve new unsolved or unseen before problems and given their probabilistic nature, their work should at minimum be double checked, unless you want to be that famous lawyer that will be disbarred over presenting 12 made up precedents to a judge.
What these systems do is, with some oversight, further lower the bar for certain tasks increasing productivity.
Specialized systems, that don't deal with language, already exist and perform better than an LLM would at those tasks.
It is a complex topic but technology has rarely caused humanity to go back in the long term, yes it can be used for bad goals but so did the first uses of ammonia process that were used by nazis to make cyclon b gas, even if the product was invented to fertilize, and avoid wars for fertilizer islands (seagulls guano island like out of the coast of chile). In the long term technology has always helped.
hollus wrote: ↑18 Jun 2023, 12:24At the risk of derailing the thread back to F1, can I ask where he said that? (And yes, you know that I will trash the quote if it turns out to have been plucked out of context).
I'd like to check what was said exactly and in which context, because I would be very surprised if AI had any way on any shape or piece placement, although I'd be zero surprised if AI is involved or even dominant in setup choices.
Of course, the term "AI" is thrown around for too many different concepts and algorithms, so there is that.
but I can only call half BS there. He heard rumors. I wonder if, maybe, in this thread?Sam Collins the tech guy on F1TV says the new AMR update is designed by CognizantAI
Well, I didn't know Cognizant had AI, and I'm not sure Sam is low-rent enough to visit these forums...hollus wrote: ↑18 Jun 2023, 17:22Thanks!
Aaaaand, at the 6:11 minute mark:
Talking about the sidepod shape around the cognizant logo:
- "And I wonder if any of that Cognizant AI has been used to develop some of the floors. I've been told some rumors that is has been."
A far cry frombut I can only call half BS there. He heard rumors. I wonder if, maybe, in this thread?Sam Collins the tech guy on F1TV says the new AMR update is designed by CognizantAI
What a service the service sector provides, endlessly absorbing every other industry's redundancy. Talk about a growth market.