| ▲ | atleastoptimal 5 days ago |
| Everyone knows how to use Google. There's a difference between a corpus of data available online and an intelligent chatbot that can answer any permutation of questions with high accuracy with no manual searching or effort. |
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| ▲ | geraneum 4 days ago | parent | next [-] |
| > Everyone knows how to use Google. Everyone knows how to type questions into a chat box, yet whenever something doesn’t work as advertised with the LLMs, the response here is, “you’re holding it wrong”. |
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| ▲ | simianwords 5 days ago | parent | prev [-] |
| Do you really think the jump from books to freely globally accessible data instantly available is a smaller jump than internet to ChatGPT? This is insane!! |
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| ▲ | raincole 4 days ago | parent [-] | | It's not just smaller, but neglectable (in comparison). In the internet era you had to parse the questions with your own brain. You just didn't necessarily need to solve them yourself. In ChatGPT era you don't even need to read the questions. At all. The questions could be written in a language you don't understand, and you still are able generate plausible answers to them. | | |
| ▲ | simianwords 4 days ago | parent [-] | | To a person from the 1920's which one is more impressive? The internet or chatgpt? | | |
| ▲ | raincole 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | | Obvious ChatGPT. I don't know how it is even a question... if you showed GPT3.5 to people from < 20th centuries there would've been a worldwide religion around it. | | |
| ▲ | simianwords 4 days ago | parent [-] | | Interesting perspective. | | |
| ▲ | mdaniel 4 days ago | parent [-] | | I recall the kerfuffle about (IIRC) llama where the engineer lost his mind thinking they had spawned life in a machine and felt it was "too dangerous to release," so it's not a ludicrous take. I would hope that the first person to ask "LLM Jesus" how many Rs are in strawberry would have torpedoed the religion, but (a) I've seen dumber mind viruses (b) it hasn't yet | | |
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| ▲ | devmor 2 days ago | parent | prev [-] | | I don't think that's really a useful question, honestly. If you asked a person from the 1920's to choose what was more impressive between a Microwave oven and cellular communication (both consequences of the invention of radar), they'd probably pick the oven. |
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