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by lostmsu
1232 days ago
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Well, there's a difference between the situation with self-driving and with language models. With self-driving, we barely ever saw anything obviously resembling human abilities, but there was a lot of marketing promising more. With language models when GPT-2 came out everyone was still saying it is a "stochastic parrot" and even GPT-3 was one. But now there's ChatGPT, and every single teenager is aware that that tool is capable of replacing them with their school assignments. And as a dev I am aware that it can write code. And yet not many people expected any of this to happen this year, neither were those capabilities promised at any point in the past. So if anything, self-driving was always overhyped, while the LLMs are quite underhyped. |
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One difference, though, is that it‘s economically not much use to have self-driving if the backup driver has to be in the car or present. While partially automating programming would make it possible to use far less programmers for the same amount of work.