riceandcashews
riceandcashews t1_jdifhix wrote
Reply to comment by ninjasaid13 in Stanford Researchers Take Down Alpaca AI Over Cost and Hallucinations by matt2001
I mean, text-davinci-003 basically was chatgpt until recently, but sure
riceandcashews t1_jdi9oy4 wrote
Reply to comment by ninjasaid13 in Stanford Researchers Take Down Alpaca AI Over Cost and Hallucinations by matt2001
text-davinci-003
which is the model underlying chatgpt 3
riceandcashews t1_jdi7iiw wrote
Reply to comment by matt2001 in Stanford Researchers Take Down Alpaca AI Over Cost and Hallucinations by matt2001
>The researchers spent just $600 to get it working
This part is a little deceptive. Alpaca is just a modification of the Meta LLAMA models. It cost $600 for Stanford to (with questionable legality) use ChatGPT to modify the LLAMA models. It cost Meta thousands to train the LLAMA models though.
riceandcashews t1_jd0iadt wrote
Reply to comment by whotheff in Do you think BluRay DVDs are the final form of physical media? Or will a new physical media format come to be, and what would that look like? by Daveyb003
Hdd is still used as slow cheap storage. If ssds actually get as cheap as hdds then yeah they'll go extinct
riceandcashews t1_jd0g0og wrote
Reply to comment by jgzman in Do you think BluRay DVDs are the final form of physical media? Or will a new physical media format come to be, and what would that look like? by Daveyb003
A usb stick is a thing that exists
riceandcashews t1_jd0fw5a wrote
Reply to Do you think BluRay DVDs are the final form of physical media? Or will a new physical media format come to be, and what would that look like? by Daveyb003
USB stick is improved physical media over blu ray. Physical media will probably never come back. Unless you count the ssds that you store your data on
riceandcashews t1_jc6qubi wrote
Reply to What steps should i take to find a Blockchain related topic for my Masters Thesis/Research? by iamrohitmishra
Uhh, I would pick a different topic tbh. Blockchain is just a distributed database and ledger. It's really not that interesting or important, and typically a centralized database is the better choice for almost all problems.
riceandcashews t1_jadhu41 wrote
Reply to comment by mhornberger in Potential of Vertical Farming? by Josh12345_
>A bag of flour and liter of cooking oil made in a bioreactor will represent a much more significant revolution than tomatoes and berries grown in vertical farms.
I came here to say this.
Vertical farms work great for mid-sized crops (strawberries or tomatoes), but not small (like wheat/corn) or large (like almond trees or apple trees). But bioreactors are going to be in serious play using bacteria to grow food in vats (yum, who doesn't want vat flour and vat oil? lol we'll get used to it)
riceandcashews t1_jadhkip wrote
Reply to Potential of Vertical Farming? by Josh12345_
Great for mid-sized crops (raspberries, tomatoes, etc.)
Terrible for very small crops (wheat, corn) or very large crops (almond trees)
So utility, but limited utility
riceandcashews t1_jaax5jk wrote
Nuclear weapons are still quite possibly the great filter. We just haven't hit the tipping point yet if that is the case
riceandcashews t1_j9pxswc wrote
Reply to comment by JRsFancy in Google announces major breakthrough that represents ‘significant shift’ in quantum computers by Ezekiel_W
In simple terms, a quantum computer can simultaneously calculate every possibility in a set of arbitrary size, whereas a classical computer would have to calculate each possibility separately.
So for small operations that's not so helpful, but for massive ones it would be revolutionary. For example, consider calculating the 3d shape of a molecule with hundreds of atoms, or the interaction of several molecules with dozens of atoms. It is impractical to do this kind of calculation with the proper math due to the number of calculations/possibilities/interactions. Right now we use a 'rough' kind of calculation that is close enough but not close enough for many fields like medicine creation and protein folding. QC would make that task easy. It would also make AI training dramatically easier. Etc.
riceandcashews t1_j9pwogb wrote
Reply to comment by Hostilis_ in Google announces major breakthrough that represents ‘significant shift’ in quantum computers by Ezekiel_W
Oh definitely - QC is basically a dream for now. The real computing advancements in the next decade will come from Graphene
riceandcashews t1_j9pwgqo wrote
Reply to comment by Ieatclowns in Google announces major breakthrough that represents ‘significant shift’ in quantum computers by Ezekiel_W
QM is relatively straightforward. The concept is this: particles don't actually have a position or spin or charge or mass or velocity. Instead there are different probabilities that we will observe a spin/charge/mass/velocity at various positions. There are 'dense' areas of probability where there is high likelihood to observe the particle/property and there are 'light' areas of probability where there is low likelihood to observe the particle property. You can think of these 'dense' and 'light' regions as crests and troughs of a wave. And just like water waves can interfere with each other (a big crest and a big trough cancel out in water, etc), so to can probability waves. As a result, instead of interacting 'classically' as objects, the quantum observations we make interact as waves of probability that can interact with each other like waves, resulting in all kinds of complex interference.
If that makes sense?
riceandcashews t1_j9pv5cx wrote
Reply to comment by adisharr in Google announces major breakthrough that represents ‘significant shift’ in quantum computers by Ezekiel_W
QM is relatively straightforward. The concept is this: particles don't actually have a position or spin or charge or mass or velocity. Instead there are different probabilities that we will observe a spin/charge/mass/velocity at various positions. There are 'dense' areas of probability where there is high likelihood to observe the particle/property and there are 'light' areas of probability where there is low likelihood to observe the particle property. You can think of these 'dense' and 'light' regions as crests and troughs of a wave. And just like water waves can interfere with each other (a big crest and a big trough cancel out in water, etc), so to can probability waves. As a result, instead of interacting 'classically' as objects, the quantum observations we make interact as waves of probability that can interact with each other like waves, resulting in all kinds of complex interference.
If that makes sense?
riceandcashews t1_j7imlkv wrote
Reply to comment by SkitzoRabbit in The Future of AI Detection is Bleak by smswigart
Wouldn't be long before an AI tool was developed to create a file with those attributes
riceandcashews t1_jdihr3n wrote
Reply to comment by matt2001 in Stanford Researchers Take Down Alpaca AI Over Cost and Hallucinations by matt2001
Definitely, the problem is that OpenAI has a non-commerical license that applies to any model trained on it. So Alpaca can not be used for anything other than research purposes legally.
We need a true open LLM to use to train other models legally