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billisonline | 2 months ago
I'm still waiting for something that can learn and adapt itself to new tasks as well as humans can, and something that can reason symbolically about novel domains as well as we can. I've seen about enough from LLMs, and I agree with the critique that som type of breakthrough neuro-symbolic reasoning architecture will be needed. The article is right about one thing: in that moment AI will overtake us suddenly! But I doubt we will make linear progress toward that goal. It could happen in one year, five, ten, fifty, or never. In 2023 I was deeply concerned about being made obsolete by AI, but now I sleep pretty soundly knowing the status quo will more or less continue until Judgment Day, which I can't influence anyway.
rukuu001|2 months ago
So, while I don't think AGI will happen any time soon, I wonder what 'roads' we'll build to squeeze the most out of our current AI. Probably tons of power generation.
sotix|2 months ago
What would that look like for navigating life without AI? Living in a community similar to the Amish or Hasidic Jews that don't integrate technology in their lives as much as the average person does? That's a much more extreme lifestyle change than moving to NYC to get away from cars.
billisonline|2 months ago
ForHackernews|2 months ago
dredmorbius|2 months ago
Cities, towns, and villages (and there were far more of the latter then) weren't walkable out of choice, but necessity. At most, by the late 19th century, urban geography was walkable-from-the-streetcar, and suburbs walkable-from-railway-station. And that only in the comparatively few metros and metro regions which had well-developed streetcar and commuter-rail lines.
With automobiles, housing spread out, became single-family, nuclear-family, often single-storey, and frequently on large lots. That's not viable when your only options to get someplace are by foot, or perhaps bicycle. Shopping moved from dense downtowns and city-centres (or perhaps shopping districts in larger cities) to strips and boulevards. Supermarkets and hypermarkets replaced corner grocery stores (which you could walk to and from with your groceries in hand, or perhaps in a cart). Eventually shopping malls were created (virtually always well away from any transit service, whether bus or rail), commercial islands in shopping-lot lakes. Big-box stores dittos.
It's not just roads and car parks, it's the entire urban landscape.
AI, should this current fad continue and succeed, will likely have similarly profound secondary effects.
rvz|2 months ago
To companies like Anthropic, “AGI” really means: “Liquidity event for (AI company)” - IPO, tender offer or acquisition.
Afterwards, you will see the same broken promises as the company will be subject to the expectations of Wall St and pension funds.
xmcqdpt2|2 months ago
https://sts-news.medium.com/youre-doing-it-wrong-notes-on-cr...
unknown|2 months ago
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creshal|2 months ago
Remember when "AGI" was the weasel word because 1980s AI kept on not delivering?
cubefox|2 months ago
That's highly irrelevant because if it were otherwise, we would already be replaced. The article was talking about the future.
danw1979|2 months ago
littlestymaar|2 months ago
It only appears “simple” because you're used to see working engines everywhere without never having to maintain them, but neither the previous generations nor the engineers working on modern engines would agree with you on that.
An engine performs “a simple mechanical operation” the same way an LLM performs a “simple computation”.