▲ | globular-toast a day ago | |||||||
Look into something like Prolog (~50 years old) to see how systems can be built from rules rather than it/else statements. It wasn't all imperative programming before LLMs. If you mean that it all breaks down to if/else at some level then, yeah, but that goes for LLMs too. LLMs aren't the quantum leap people seem to think they are. | ||||||||
▲ | TheOtherHobbes a day ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
They are from the user POV. Not necessarily in a good way. The whole point of algorithmic AI was that it was deterministic and - if the algorithm was correct - reliable. I don't think anyone expected that soft/statistical linguistic/dimensional reasoning would be used as a substitute for hard logic. It has its uses, but it's still a poor fit for many problems. | ||||||||
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▲ | ozim a day ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
maybe not on their own - but having enough computing power to use LLMs in a way we do now and actually using them is quite a leap. |