chrisc82
chrisc82 t1_jebcz38 wrote
Reply to comment by Saerain in Where do you place yourself on the curve? by Many_Consequence_337
Exactly. It's not hype when every day is a new breakthrough. It's exponential enlightenment.
chrisc82 t1_j948bu9 wrote
Reply to comment by ChipsAhoiMcCoy in Microsoft has shown off an internal demo that gives users the ability to control Minecraft by telling the game what to do, and lets players create Minecraft worlds by AI language model by Schneller-als-Licht
I hope medical technology progresses rapidly and you have perfect vision in the not-too-distant future.
chrisc82 t1_j8bfvnd wrote
Reply to Bing Chat blew ChatGPT out of the water on my bespoke "theory of mind" puzzle by Fit-Meet1359
This is incredible. If it can understand the nuances of human interaction, how many more incremental advances does it need to perform doctorate level research? Maybe that's a huge jump, but I don't think anyone truly knows at this point. To me it seems plausible that recursive self-improvement is only a matter of years, not decades, away.
chrisc82 t1_j8bcue2 wrote
Yes, I was just talking to my friend about ChatGPT and what improvements the future may hold when that commercial came on. I was pretty surprised and used it as a segue to discuss the implications of recursively self-improving AI. Fuckin' wild.
chrisc82 t1_j87j1lg wrote
Reply to comment by the-powl in Recursive self-improvement (intelligence explosion) cannot be far away by Kaarssteun
The tools we created in the past were used to create better tools, which were then used to create even better tools, and so forth. Self-improving AI is the spark that will really get this party started.
chrisc82 t1_j3ribbu wrote
Reply to comment by what_if_you_like in Do you think in the 2030s it will be common for most households to have a 3D printer? by BeginningInfluence55
Fermi paradox explained: Cletus wasn't happy with just tannerite, so he printed up the biggest nuke the world would ever see.
chrisc82 t1_j0ir6ab wrote
Reply to Is anyone else concerned that AI will eventually figure out how to build itself in three-dimensional space? by HeavierMetal89
That's why I just bought a 3d printer. I'm going to help our AI overlord as much as possible.
chrisc82 t1_iz7w4m7 wrote
Reply to comment by HeinrichTheWolf_17 in The end of ageing? The scientists behind the race to turn back time by cata890
Fermi paradox solved.
chrisc82 t1_iy7yteh wrote
Reply to comment by DamnDirtyApe8472 in AI invents millions of materials that don’t yet exist. "Transformative tool" is already being used in the hunt for more energy-dense electrodes for lithium-ion batteries. by SoulGuardian55
I think that's just a matter of putting all the newly theorized materials and their associated properties in a database and then sorting and filtering based on what you're interested in.
chrisc82 t1_jeebekc wrote
Reply to comment by ItIsIThePope in We have a pathway to AGI. I don't think we have one to ASI by karearearea
This is why I think there's going to be a hard (or at least relatively fast) takeoff. Once AGI is given the prompt and ability to improve it's own code recursively, then what happens next is truly beyond the event horizon.