| > Gemini 2.5 pro the model has not gained any intelligence since it is a static model. Surely that's an irrelevant distinction, from the point of view of a hiring manager? If a kid takes ten years from middle school to being worth hiring, then the question is "what new AI do you expect will exist in 10 years?" How the model comes to be, doesn't matter. Is it a fine tune on more training data from your company docs and/or an extra decade of the internet? A different architecture? A different lab in a different country? Doesn't matter. Doesn't matter for the same reason you didn't hire the kid immediately out of middle school, and hired someone else who had already had another decade to learn more in the meantime. Doesn't matter for the same reason that different flesh humans aren't perfectly substitutable. You pay to solve a problem, not to specifically have a human solve it. Today, not in ten years when today's middle schooler graduates from university. And that's even though I agree that AI today doesn't learn effectively from as few examples as humans need. |
Stop moving the goalposts closer, that you think humans might make an AGI in the future doesn't mean the current AI is an AGI just because it uses the same interface.