> do we honestly feel like we've exhausted the options for delivering value on top of the current generation of LLMs?
I know we absolutely have not, but I think we have reached the limit in terms of the Chatbot experience that ChatGPT is. For some reason the industry keeps trying to force the chatbot interface to do literally everything to the point that we now have inflated roles like "Prompt Engineers". This is to say that people suck at knowing what they want off the rip, and LLMs can't help with that if they're not integrated in technology in such a way where a solid foundation is built to allow the models to generate good output.
LLMs and other big data models have incredible potential for things like security, medicine, and the power industry to name a few fields. I mean I was recently talking with a professor about his research in applying deep learning to address growing security concerns in cars on the road.
I know we absolutely have not, but I think we have reached the limit in terms of the Chatbot experience that ChatGPT is. For some reason the industry keeps trying to force the chatbot interface to do literally everything to the point that we now have inflated roles like "Prompt Engineers". This is to say that people suck at knowing what they want off the rip, and LLMs can't help with that if they're not integrated in technology in such a way where a solid foundation is built to allow the models to generate good output.
LLMs and other big data models have incredible potential for things like security, medicine, and the power industry to name a few fields. I mean I was recently talking with a professor about his research in applying deep learning to address growing security concerns in cars on the road.
The application is far from reaching the ceiling.