| ▲ | thereitgoes456 a day ago | |
DeepMind did release a math specific model. And OpenAI has released a coding specific model. The answer to your question is “because the market isn’t big enough”, not because it doesn’t work. Why would knowing about 2019 internet memes help you in any way at coding? | ||
| ▲ | andy99 19 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
> Why would knowing about 2019 internet memes help you in any way at coding? 99.99% of the knowledge an LLM has is useless for a given scenario, the hard part is knowing what the .01% that’s needed is. Knowing as much as it can means the model can handle edge cases, turns of phrase, etc. Put another way, it avoids overfitting. That’s basically the insight that’s given way to the current AI boom. | ||
| ▲ | InsomniacL a day ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |
> Why would knowing about 2019 internet memes help you in any way at coding? https://github.com/Brainrotlang/brainrot "Brainrot is a meme-inspired programming language that translates common programming keywords into internet slang and meme references." | ||
| ▲ | simianwords a day ago | parent | prev [-] | |
> And OpenAI has released a coding specific model They did and retracted it because they found that GPT 5.5 beat codex pareto optimally. This keeps happening. > because the market isn’t big enough Huuh? market isn't big enough for AGI? The parent suggested that AGI would emerge from this process. | ||