| ▲ | tossandthrow 4 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
This approach dismisses the cases where Ai submissions generally are better. I don't think this is appreciated enough: a lot of Ai adaptation is not happening because of cost on the expense of quality. Quite the opposite. I am in the process of switching my company's use of retool for an Ai generated backoffice. First and foremost for usability, velocity and security. Secondly, we also save a buck. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | moregrist 4 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
> This approach dismisses the cases where Ai submissions generally are better. You’re perhaps missing the not so subtle subtext of Peter Woit’s post, and entire blog, which is: While AI is getting better, it’s still not _good_ by the standards of most science. However it’s as good as hep-th where (according to Peter Woit) the bar is incredibly low. His thesis is part “the whole field is bad” and part “Arxiv for this subfield is full of human slop.” I don’t have the background to engage with whether Peter Woit’s argument has merit, but it’s been consistent for 25+ years. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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