| > We've yet to see those surprisng ways despite all the claims. This is the one reason everyone is finding them fascinating. Perhaps you find them boring. Rote. Or something. But the reason non-technical people, as well as technical people, are enjoying and learning by interacting with chat and other models is how often the results are interesting. I asked ChatGPT-4 to create a Dr. Seuss story about Cat in the Hat and my green conure parrot Teansy, that involved sewing and Italy. It produced a wonderful story of how they met in Italy, became friends, encountered a homeless child with a threadbare blanket and help the child. Then began helping others and ended up creating a fashion design studio. All written in Dr. Seuss prose that made for a perfect children's book. Pretty creative. I then asked GPT to continue the story, but as a James Bond novel where one of Teansy's mysterious clients was actually a criminal using the fashion industry to hide his nefarious practices, and that Teansy should help James Bond solve the case. For that I got another great story, completely consistent to James Bond tropes. It came up with a story line where the fashion industry was used to launder blood diamonds, which I thought was brilliant. A perfectly good rational for a James Bond villain. The story was great. Throughout, Chat threw in funny suitable mentions about Teansy's fashion focuses, including feather lined wear, etc. And all this creativity in a first draft written as fast as I could read it. A year ago, nothing on the planet but a whimsical human with too much time (more time than it took Chat), on their hands could do this. -- Obviously, we are discovering Chat can perform far more complex behaviors. Act as any agent we describe including computer systems, or the internet. Respond quickly to feedback. Form plans. Learn and summarize the grammar of small artificial languages fairly well just from examples, ... Without interacting with these models we would never have declared these were expected behaviors. So I don't know what basis the emergence of these behaviors isn't surprising. Hoped for, envisioned, sure. But hardly an expression of obviously predetermined designed-in capabilities. |