"Ubuntu users lay out a plan for switching distros" ... got it.
Literally eyeing the door rn
...training them to be skeptical and not blindly trust what comes out of the machine...
This is always what I don't understand about using ai in it's current form. If you can't know if it's right or wrong, and have to double check it, why use it in the first place? Would it not be more efficient and easier to just use the couple of petaflops you have in your own head to solve the problem or write that email?
I think then, that it is more of a novelty that has yet to ware off for some people and is conisistently buoyed by the ceos that push it.
If you can’t know if it’s right or wrong, and have to double check it, why use it in the first place?
Me and my partner alternate doing the cooking. She doesn't know if I'm going to make a mistake and serve her something she doesn't like (it has happened). Does that mean she's better off doing all the cooking herself?
"If it's not perfect, it's useless" is a fallacy. So the question is, how good does it have to be to be useful? That depends on the task, and especially on the cost (however you measure it - dollars or hours or whatever) of verifying whether the result is good compare to the cost of a person doing the task.
When you cook well, you can eat the food.
When the bot says something, you always need to look up if it's correct. That's the 'cook a new meal from scratch' bit, not the 'taste it' bit.
You need to look things up every time, or do the taste test by asking if the bot's answer 'smells true' (which is tempting, but a bad idea).
If you are using the bot just to perform things that you could easily look up, then yes, that is pointless.
If you can't know if it's right or wrong, and have to double check it, why use it in the first place?
"If you can't trust that a friend solved a sudoku puzzle for you without checking it first, why even bother?"
The obvious answer being that it's much easier to check the solution to a sudoku puzzle than it is to solve it yourself. If you have reasonable means to check compared to going out and starting from scratch, then even a modest enough rate of correct answers can save a ton of time. LLMs don't have that for me, but that's also because I've been doing research as a hobby for 10 years.
If you know anything about computation theory, there's an entire class of problems for which checking a solution is (relatively) trivial but finding a correct one is highly non-trivial.
It's easier to copy~~write~~edit an email that to write it from scratch.
Edit: I meant copyedit, not copywrite
This should go over well
yes I'm sure this decision will have lots of well-reasoned and civilized debate around it.

Don't mind me, just here to watch.
The Ubuntu users who cared have already left.
the blog post phoronix linked which the verge references https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/the-future-of-ai-in-ubuntu/81130
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