DWalt
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Not difficult to see what's coming. Musk's xAI Reportedly Building 'World's Largest Supercomputer' in Memphis | PCMag
Not difficult to see what's coming. Musk's xAI Reportedly Building 'World's Largest Supercomputer' in Memphis | PCMag
Yeah, that was pretty much my point.I have no frame of reference as to what 100,000 GPUs is capable of doing. Let alone 350,000 GPUs. Then what? A million? 10 Million? Is there an upper limit? At what point do humans become superfluous?
I am not a big Musk fan either way, but this works
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The wife still works and can do the majority of it remotely. There are lots of great areas in Montana that don't have any cell service at all. But with this we can be anywhere we want and she can do her work. Right now we are in the Missouri river Breaks on the Charles Russell Reserve. Full fishing. You never know what you're going to catch next. Catfish, burbot, sturgeon, sauger, Walleye, Small mouth, turtle, northern, drum, carp, shad, plus you can trap crawdads galore. Wee.
Yes it is more than other services, but it comes with freedom and once hunting season is over, we can shut it off until we want to start camping in the spring.
Things like nonsensical answers, etc. are simply early stage AI issues. They, and similar shortcomings, WILL be overcome in fairly short order. Technology evolution is inevitable as technology builds upon itself. And advancements usually happen much faster than anyone anticipates. All the signals are there. We are entering into the rapid widespread adoption phase where finding new uses for AI begin in a very big way. Think back to the dawn of cell phones and PCs in the 1980s. That is comparable to where AI is today.BC38 said:I recently read that ChatGP is returning completely nonsensical results because a part of how it is formulating its responses are based on tallying the number of "upvotes" (a.k.a. the number of "likes") for questions posted on sites like Quora and Google.
One example I read about was a question about the best ingredients to make marinara spaghetti sauce. When someone asked that question, someone else posted a completely nonsensical tongue-in-cheek response suggesting that gasoline would be a good ingredient to add to the sauce.
Then a lot of people "upvoted" the suggestion to add gasoline - because they found it amusing
Is that true intelligence - real or artificial? I don't think so. It is just another example of the GIGO principle. GIGO=Garbage In Garbage Out.
A computer "intelligence" is only as "smart" as the info it's programmers are feeding into it, or allowing it to access.
Adding the ability to search and interpret digital images (in addition to digital written data) may be a step towards a true artificial intelligence, but in reality it is just a more sophisticated form of search engine. True computer intelligence is still a long ways off - assuming it is even possible to begin with.
That is not far from factual. Give it about 10 years. Maybe sooner than that.Skynet is real....
Things like nonsensical answers, etc. are simply early stage AI issues. They, and similar shortcomings, WILL be overcome in fairly short order.
Technology evolution is inevitable as technology builds upon itself. And advancements usually happen much faster than anyone anticipates...
Not the same at all. As I said, tools get better, but they don't spontaneously get smart. With all the advances in medicine and genetics in the last few decades, with all we understand about life and how to manipulate biology, we still haven't figured out how to make one single living cell from scratch. Not even close - in fact we still have no clue where to start.All the signals are there. We are entering into the rapid widespread adoption phase where finding new uses for AI begin in a very big way. Think back to the dawn of cell phones and PCs in the 1980s. That is comparable to where AI is today.
You really think so?Skynet is real....
That is not far from factual. Give it about 10 years. Maybe sooner than that.
AI probably has as good or better chance of bring actual peace to the world than human kind does.
I don't disagree, but I'm wondering what kind of peace? What if the AI decides that peace can only be achieved by killing all humans? No people no war. It's logical. It's immoral, but a computer doesn't understand morals. It only understands ones and zeros.
Man is by nature immoral. However we are also capable of very admirable morality - which at it's most basic level can be distilled to the concept of self-sacrifice. Look at "the Greatest Generation" for the most recent shining example of self sacrifice. Morality by that definition boils down to dong what is best for others (or society) even when it isn't in our own best interests. Humans have a great capacity - not always realized - for that kind of self-sacrificial morality.Computers are neither moral or immoral, but amoral. Man is immoral and has proven itself so from the beginning of time. Even at this stage of "advanced civilization" the world wide homicide rate is about 5.8 per 100,000. The US rate is 6.4
No mater (sic) how many beauty pageant contestants want world peace humans will not achieve it. If you doubt me I offer the situation in " The Holy Land" as an example of our intelligence and abilities in that regard.
I am far more concerned about humans using computers to kill each other than I am about AI taking over and doing it. Even if computers do actually become sentient, it will be a while before they will be able to built, maintain and produce their own power. IF they became sentient, they would quickly figure that out. NO HUMANS NO LONG TERM POWER
One thought on computers and BC38s analysis, when I went to computer science school way back when (1969) it was proposed that computers would never be able to consistently beat humans at chess, because you would need a human to built and program the computer and it would take a chess grand master who was also an top programmer to write such a program. Now even the Grand Masters rarely beat computers.