Good
Nick Cage face, “You don’t say!?”
no one is buying a mass market new pc for ‘ai’, they’re buying the new pc because of the forced obsolescence of windows 10 and every pc that predates ‘8th gen’ intel.
It annoys me that “eighth gen” Intel means something other than the Pentium 3.
No one wants a “tell me something wrong” button.
Then, why do people have Twitter on their phones?
Im so hyped for the future. All this useless innovation while we still struggle to meet basic needs of people.
When AI surpasses humans it’ll be used for good humanitarian purposes and not for business! Trust me bro!
We tried to warn them.
I hate investor brain
Way too early for this tech… but at least we got some beast NPU designs. This is useful in science work.
The “super cycle” was nonsense to begin with. Many of the “features” are multi-step processes that average users would never adopt. I had to watch YouTube videos to fully understand the AI features on my phone, and I’m an enthusiast. For most users, ChatGPT is AI. They were never going to buy AI-specific hardware.
*Spell checked and tone shifted by Galaxy AI ™️
“Ai” is largely a gimmick. It can be an impressive gimmick at times, but the failure rate and misses are too common to really trust. I’m an enthusiast, so I have been dabbling a lot with what it can do, and theoretically there are some really cool applications - but we’re not there yet. I’ve got Gemini on my phone, and yeah… I can talk to it about things, but like… Why? The most useful thing I’ve done with it so far is ask it specific game information like, “hey, I’m in x level and I see a chest. I can’t see a way to get it right now, is it something I can come back and get later? Or do I have to figure it out now?”. And it can answer that.
Saves me from having to look up an ad riddled guide, but that’s not a killer feature. Integration with aps could be huge, where it can actually do whatever task for you, or automate something tedious, but that’s still not super common. I’d rather personally and directly control anything vaguely important.
It’s really a solution looking for a problem.
The most useful thing I’ve done with it so far is ask it specific game information like, “hey, I’m in x level and I see a chest. I can’t see a way to get it right now, is it something I can come back and get later? Or do I have to figure it out now?”. And it can answer that.
Yeah, except it can also get things very wrong. I tested it against my RuneScape knowledge. RuneScape is niche enough to not have them “fixing up” stuff specifically for it to make it look good and big enough that there has been a lot written for the LLM to go off of.
Suffice to say its advice was plausible sounding but inefficient if not outright grammatically correct nonsense. I would’ve been better served in every case by looking up player made guides.
Saves me from having to look up an ad riddled guide, but that’s not a killer feature. Integration with aps could be huge, where it can actually do whatever task for you, or automate something tedious, but that’s still not super common. I’d rather personally and directly control anything vaguely important.
Yeah it’s kind of that last bit there.
I honestly don’t know what they’re going to do with AI stuff but I feel it’s going to be a huge bust. The fundamentals of the technology are just completely unproven. To me it seems like a bunch of people invested in a palm reading machine and then (because they have a lot of money) tried to convince themselves and everyone else that the palm reading machine really is going to change the would (and they didn’t just get scammed).
Agreed. It gives results that appear promising, and if they were correct all the time it would be amazing… But it’s not, though sometimes it is.
I have one I was messing with that would scan through a document and answer questions about it with sources cited from the document. I feel like that’s the best path to trusting the output.
Also, I think game questions are best suited to asking solutions to linear quests that have a defined answer. I asked it about a good Destiny build, and it answered but what it gave me was a pretty basic build that doesn’t work the best in the current meta, but I kinda knew it couldn’t give me a good answer there.
Because it’s not always totally correct, you can’t trust it. Investors are shown examples where it is correct and incorrectly extrapolate the trend.
Thank God
who could have predicted that?
Surely not everybody!
I hope everyone who got laid off because these overpaid shit-for-brains monkeyfucks blew all the money on garbage tech they didn’t understand goes on a tirade against them that topples each company in short order.
The article explicitly say this could , but is not for sure the sign of the AI bubble bursting.
We’ll see where this goes.