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by lumost
1280 days ago
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As a fellow participant in the ML world, I think there is compelling evidence to disagree with this take. ChatGPT’s responses on operator valued functions were accurate and valid, however ages of time on google failed to turn up this topic previously. On coding tasks, chatGPT can ask clarifying questions on requirements and determine if it has enough information to write the code correctly. Unfortunately you need to direct it to ask questions as needed and include appropriate tests to get the right answer. ChatGPT also fails in cases where it needs feedback from an external environment/documentation search. It will produce close enough code, but may need correction based on observed errors etc. |
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I don't want to undermine the work though. I think many people that complain about stochastic parrots also fail to recognize that they still are quite useful, as many other comments are noting, but useful is a far cry from intelligent or has the ability to understand. We need to be clear about that difference if we're working towards AGI vs working towards useful products.
> Which weighs more, a kilogram of bricks or two kilograms of feathers?
> A kilogram of bricks and two kilograms of feathers both weigh the same amount. The weight of an object is determined by its mass, not the size or shape of the object. One kilogram is equal to 1,000 grams and two kilograms is equal to 2,000 grams. Therefore, both a kilogram of bricks and two kilograms of feathers weigh the same amount.