| ChatGPT was announced November, 2022 - 8 months ago. Time flies. Question for HN: Where are we in the hype cycle on this? We can run shitty clones slowly on Raspberry Pi's and your phone. The educational implementations demonstrate the basics in under a thousand lines of brisk C. Great. At some point you have to wonder... well, so what? Not one killer app has emerged. I for one am eager to be all hip and open minded and pretend like I use LLMs all the time for everything and they are "the future" but novelty aside it seems like so far we have a demented clippy and some sophomoric arguments about alignment and wrong think. It did generate a whole lot of breathless click-bait-y articles and gave people something to blab about. Ironically it also accelerated the value of that sort of gab and clicks towards zero. As I am not a VC, politician, or opportunist, hand waving and telling me this is Frankenstein's monster about to come alive and therefore I need billions of dollars or "regulations" just makes folks sound like the crypto scammers. Please HN, say something actually insightful, I beg you. |
"Is this a problem where an answer that is mostly right and sometimes wrong is still a great value proposition?"
This is what people don't get. If sometimes the answer is (catastrophically) wrong, and the cost of this is high, there's no market fit. So I think a lot of these early LLM related startups are going to be trainwrecks because they haven't figured this out. If the cost of an error is very high in your business, and human checking is what you are trying to avoid, these are not nearly as helpful.
I looked at one company in this scenario and they were dying. Couldn't get big customers to commit because the product was just not worth it if it couldn't be reliably right on something that a human was never going to get wrong (can't say what it was, NDAs and all that.) I also looked at one where they were doing very well because an answer that was usually close would save workers tons of time, and the nature of the biz was that eliminating the human verification step would make no sense anyway. Let's just say it was in a very onerous search problem, and it was trivial for the searcher to say "wrong wrong wrong, RIGHT, phew that saved me hours!". And that saving was going to add up to very significant cash.
So killer apps are going to be out there. But I agree that there is massive overhype and it's not all of them! (or even many!)