Wow they really did it.
They put the um in the coconut and shake it all up
Wow they really did it.
They put the um in the coconut and shake it all up
It would appear the coconut is the only one they didn't put the um in though
Have an angry (and admiring) upvote.
For some reason I don't have AI search on my account, but I still get the same answer:
That's probably a real answer from someone on Quora then
What's the point in having an AI run the search and present the found answer for you, when you just ran the search yourself and gets the AI finding presented?
As this point AI helpers are just a layer that hides the details from the original search. It's useless for this. AI is wonderful for lots of stuff, but this just isn't it. I used to laugh when people used the Google search box to find Google so they could search in Google, but that is exactly what AI is doing for us now.
Plus the insane power consumption for such a marginally useful feature. Especially given that it’s on by default for everyone using google (as I understand)
It’s almost like the feature is not ready but they need to show off to their investors anyway. At the cost of user experience and the environment.
At least with ChatGPT you have to consciously go to their website and use, rather than being the first result of a fucking internet search.
More eyes on your website, means less on other websites, making your adverts more valuable.
And when it doesn’t work, it doesn’t matter, because you run the advertising on the other websites too. Bonus: you can penalise rankings for websites that don’t use your advertising network.
Was having a related conversation with an employee this morning (I manage a software engineering organization). He asked an LLM how to separate the parts of a date in Excel, and got a pretty good explanation of how do it with the text to columns wizard, and also how to use a formula to get each part. He was happy because he felt it would have taken him much longer to figure it out himself.
I was saying I thought that was a good use of an LLM - it's going to give a tailored answer - but my worry is that people will do less scrubbing of an answer coming from an AI than one they saw on a forum. I said we should think of it like a tailored Google search.
For comparison, I googled "Excel formula separate parts of a date" and one of the top results was a forum discussion that had the exact solutions the LLM gave, using the same examples. On the one hand, to get it from the forum you had to wade through all the wrong answers and discussions. On the other hand, that discussion puts the answer given in the context of a bunch of others that are off the mark, and I think make people less likely to assume it's correct.
In any case, it's still just synthesizing from or regurgitating training data.
I think LLMs are better for more fluffy stuff, like writing speeches etc.
Excel solutions are often very specific. A vague question like separating a date can be solved in many ways, using a variety of formulas, the text-to-column wizard, VBA, import queries or even just formatting, all depending on what you really need, what the input is and what locality is used and other things.
The text-to-column method is great, because it transforms whatever the input is into a date type, making it possible to treat it as and make calculations as an actual date. It's not always the right solution though, for instance if the input is ambiguous.
It's fine that he learned to use this method, but I wonder what he'd ask the LMM in a case where it isn't the right solution and what it'll come up with then. He didn't actually learn to separate a date from the input. He learned to use the text import wizard.
In my experience it's preferable to learn these things on a more basic level if only just to be able to search more specifically for the right answer, because there is a specific answer. Having a language model run through a bunch of solutions and presenting the most popular one might just be a waste of time and leading you into a wild goose chase.
You might have missed where I said it explained both the text to columns wizard and a formula. He used the formula, which is what he was looking for. He's a top notch software developer, he just doesn't use Excel much.
But I agree with your broader point. I keep having to remind people that the "LM" part is for "language model." It's not figuring anything out, it's distilling what an answer should look like. A great example is to ask one for a mathematical proof that isn't commonly found online - maybe something novel. In all likelihood, it's going to give you one, and it will probably look like the right kind of stuff, but it will also probably be wrong. It doesn't know math (it doesn't know anything), it just has a model of what a response should look like.
That being said, they're pretty good for a number of things. One great example is lesson plans. From what I understand, most teachers now give an LLM the coursework and ask it to generate a lesson plan. Apparently they do an excellent job and save many hours of work. Anything that involves summarizing information is good, especially as that constrains the training data.
So many fruits in the berrum family, can't believe they even had to google that question...
Looks like it's learned that adding "according to Quora" makes it look more authoritative. Maybe with a few more weeks of training it'll figure out how to make fake citations of sources that are actually trustworthy.
Just wait until it starts taking stuff from 4chan, twitch, and twitter. Things are going to be come so much more interesting.
Google signing a contract with 4chan for data training is actually so stupid I don't think it'll ever happen.
4chan is almost certainly blacklisted from basically everything AI given the sites content and history of intentionally destroying chatbots/earlier 'AI's.
But at the same time they paid reddit millions to train on "authoritative" posts like that one from "fuckSmith" that suggested to add glue to pizza
As @Karyoplasma@discuss.tchncs.de pointed out, this is an actual answer on Quora so at least it got that right
I think it’s also a way of shifting the blame.
I'll allow that one because it said "According to Quora" so you knew to ignore it.
"If it's on the internet it must be true" implemented in a billion dollar project.
Pretty sure AI will start telling us "You should not believe everything you see on the internet as told by Abraham Lincoln"
Not sure what would frighten me more: the fact that this is trainings data or if it was hallucinated
Neither, in this case it's an accurate summary of one of the results, which happens to be a shitpost on Quara. See, LLM search results can work as intended and authoritatively repeat search results with zero critical analysis!
"AI" has always been like this... It's not sentient or rational... It's not thinking it's just averaging language... It's not really AI, it's a language model.
Language models are just one type of AI, so it's overly reductive to say thay all AI is like this. The computer players in Mario Kart are also AI, for example.
There goes my making shit up job.
Now LLMs are even taking the jobs of professional trolls! What's gonna be next? The scambots loosing their jobs to LLMs?!
I think the names end with um in Latin.
https://www.wordhippo.com/what-is/the/latin-word-for-d0be2dc421be4fcd0172e5afceea3970e2f3d940.html
Everything ends with um in Latin!
Hoc casu non est
So why does everything end with a vowel n modern Italian?
Latinum. Fix that for you.
Coconut
AI is the vulture
AI is the future, unfortunately we are eternally stuck in the present.
Looks like AI is lots and lots of "artificial" and close to nothing in the area of "intelligence".
Coconut um!
one is unlike the other
"nutted" instead "um"
Always trust user input. Surely the AI will figure it out.
Welcome to Lemmy Shitpost. Here you can shitpost to your hearts content.
Anything and everything goes. Memes, Jokes, Vents and Banter. Though we still have to comply with lemmy.world instance rules. So behave!
1. Be Respectful
Refrain from using harmful language pertaining to a protected characteristic: e.g. race, gender, sexuality, disability or religion.
Refrain from being argumentative when responding or commenting to posts/replies. Personal attacks are not welcome here.
...
2. No Illegal Content
Content that violates the law. Any post/comment found to be in breach of common law will be removed and given to the authorities if required.
That means:
-No promoting violence/threats against any individuals
-No CSA content or Revenge Porn
-No sharing private/personal information (Doxxing)
...
3. No Spam
Posting the same post, no matter the intent is against the rules.
-If you have posted content, please refrain from re-posting said content within this community.
-Do not spam posts with intent to harass, annoy, bully, advertise, scam or harm this community.
-No posting Scams/Advertisements/Phishing Links/IP Grabbers
-No Bots, Bots will be banned from the community.
...
4. No Porn/Explicit
Content
-Do not post explicit content. Lemmy.World is not the instance for NSFW content.
-Do not post Gore or Shock Content.
...
5. No Enciting Harassment,
Brigading, Doxxing or Witch Hunts
-Do not Brigade other Communities
-No calls to action against other communities/users within Lemmy or outside of Lemmy.
-No Witch Hunts against users/communities.
-No content that harasses members within or outside of the community.
...
6. NSFW should be behind NSFW tags.
-Content that is NSFW should be behind NSFW tags.
-Content that might be distressing should be kept behind NSFW tags.
...
If you see content that is a breach of the rules, please flag and report the comment and a moderator will take action where they can.
Also check out:
Partnered Communities:
1.Memes
10.LinuxMemes (Linux themed memes)
Reach out to
All communities included on the sidebar are to be made in compliance with the instance rules. Striker