@Sl00k
@programming.devwhich does support the idea that there is a limit to how good they can get.
I absolutely agree, im not necessarily one to say LLMs will become this incredible general intelligence level AIs. I'm really just disagreeing with people's negative sentiment about them becoming worse / scams is not true at the moment.
I doesn't prove it either: as I said, 2 data points aren't enough to derive a curve
Yeah only reason I didn't include more is because it's a pain in the ass pulling together multiple research papers / results over the span of GPT 2, 3, 3.5, 4, 01 etc.
That's definitely valid, but just because a tool is used for scam doesn't inherently mean it's a scam. I don't call the cellphone a scam because most my calls are.
The jump from GPT-4o -> o1 (preview not full release) was a 20% cumulative knowledge jump. If that's not an improvement in accuracy I'm not sure what is.
Compare the GPT increase from their V2 GPT4o model to their reasoning o1 preview model. The jumps from last years GPT 3.5 -> GPT 4 were also quite large. Secondly if you want to take OpenAI's own research into account that's in the second image.
Curious why your perspective is they're are more of a scam when by all metrics they've only improved in accuracy?
Let's not forget how will only buy electricity back at a variable yet, sell it at a static rate and keep the profit.
Also up charging a tax on selling electricity back into the grid for "use of their equipment", which understandable i get but again c'mon.
The realistic progress needing to be done here is a battery storage solution as power needed during intense solar days is effectively 0% in California nowadays. We need to store that energy and use it during night but then it eats into PG&Es profits and we can't have that can we?
Everything done under the guise of "progress" is helping a corporation somewhere.
This is interesting, haven't heard of it. I think the problem with the disc format is you aren't getting 28 TB of content on there unless you span multiple discs which is a pain in the ass
nobody out there has come up with a good way to permanently archive all that stuff
Personally I can't wait for these glass hard drives being researched to come at the consumer or even corporate level. Yes they're only writable one time and read only after that, but I absolutely love the concept of being able to write my entire Plex server to a glass harddrive, plug it in and never have to sorry about it again.
Just another reason our election shouldn't be entirely dependent on 10,000 people in Pennsylvania.