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wildermuthn | 1 year ago
These LLM programs are very different than naive one-shot questions asked of ChatGPT, resembling o1/3 thinking that integrates human domain knowledge to produce great answers that would have been cost-prohibitive for humans to do manually.
Naive use of LLMs by non-technical users is annoying, but is also a straw-man argument against the technology. Smart usage of LLMs in o1/3 style of emulated reasoning unlocks entirely new realms of functionality.
LLMs are analogous to a new programming platform, such as iPhones and VR. New platforms unlock new functionality along with various tradeoffs. We need time to explore what makes sense to build on top of this platform, and what things don’t make sense.
What we shouldn’t do is give blanket approval or disapproval. Like any other technology, we should use the right tool for the job and utilize said tool correctly and effectively.
Timber-6539|1 year ago
everdrive|1 year ago
I agree in principle, but disagree in practice. With LLMs available to everyone, the uses we're seeing currently will only proliferate. Is that strictly a technology problem? No, but it's cold comfort given how LLM usage is actually playing out day-to-day. Social media is a useful metaphor here: it could potentially be a strictly useful technology, but in practice it's used to quite deleterious effect.
kbr-|1 year ago
neves|1 year ago
baobabKoodaa|1 year ago