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by jdthedisciple
428 days ago
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> thousands of points of nasty unstructured client data What I always wonder in these kinds of cases is: What makes you confident the AI actually did a good job since presumably you haven't looked at the thousands of client data yourself? For all you know it made up 50% of the result. |
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It's the same problem factories have: they produce a lot of parts, and it's very expensive to put a full operator or more on a machine to do 100% part inspection. And the machines aren't perfect, so we can't just trust that they work.
So starting in the 1920s Walter Shewhart and Edward Deming came up with Statistical Process Control. We accept the quality of the product produced based on the variance we see of samples, and how they measure against upper and lower control limits.
Based on that, we can estimate a "good parts rate" (which later got used in ideas like Six Sigma to describe the probability of bad parts being passed).
The software industry was built on determinism, but now software engineers will need to learn the statistical methods created by engineers who have forever lived in the stochastic world of making physical products.