I saw and still see denial in the art, photography and design community. But with each release of Standard Diffusion and Midjourney is obvious that photographers are becoming obsolete. As one human who decided to change my job 6 months ago based on what I saw in the field of AI, I can say it was a good decision. I believe that the same will happen to a lot of developers and people working in the tech industry in the following year.
Are you knowledgeable in medical ethics? It’s well known that it’s unethical to be offering experimental treatments, even to desperate patients, that don’t have at least the very low bar of “does this cause immediate death or serious life worsening of animal models, does this appear to have any benefit in animal models”.
There was in fact a whole scandal about this recently with artificial tracheas. Living with a tube in your throat to breathe is a horrible way to live, but the people who got artificial ones died horrible and slow deaths because they evidence of their efficacy in mouse models were forged through a cult of personality of the head researcher and the promise of potential life changing gains.
There will be more players taking market share from Google. Even if Google ultimately wins, they will have less revenue. ChatGPT represents a new beginning for the industry
Mexican living in México, ~95% of the population use Facebook, word of mouth or driving around where you want to find a place to rent. Of course there are many sites that you can use to find a place to rent, but the best deals and more options are available on Facebook.
Facebook doesn't act as the central trust authority. So as an expat, most realtor is telling me to avoid FB and use them because scams. But as a user it's inefficient to talk to 20 Realtors for 20 listings.
I just want something in between that doesn't inflate the actual price by 40%
This needs a lot of curation. Maybe put some ads and offer a percentage to users willing to give ratings to the quality of the images. I will be happy to spend some time clicking , to earn some money for a beer once in a while.
You're spot on with the curation! I'm really exciting to add voting and weighing to the images. I think that's where this'll really start to shine. "Girl reading in a coffee shop" generates about 1 usable image per summon, so I'm looking forward to empowering users to manually filter for more usable images.
It's not about what we need. Scientific research in this case has been the result of looking around and seen what can be done with the technology at hand without caring if it was what we need or don't. If you feel like "we" should be automating other stuff, you are free to make your own contribution, it's not like OpenAI owns the keys to the field.
But the people at OpenAI aren’t doing it as a hobby, they’ve got a lot of money to conduct this research (from Wikipedia: “The organization was founded in San Francisco in late 2015 by Elon Musk, Sam Altman, and others, who collectively pledged US$1 billion.” [1])
This is the misallocation of resources I’m referring to.
I don't understand where the misallocation of resources is. OpenAI is no longer a non-profit organization. Its goal is not to automate what is most needed now. But to advance the field of AI.
And that's all highly speculative, betting on money to somehow show up, for reasons impossible to predict, if only enough games are changed sufficiently hard. If it can be done it will be done, unless we fundamentally change the way we run the economy.
Conclusions:
(1) Perhaps we should, winning at net zero games is very much a thing in the current way
(2) Didn't know it when I started writing this reply (not at all!), but I guess I agree with you
(3) I really miss Old Google, and how we happily trusted them (deservedly or not)
If you read directly from the site. The requirements for the graphic card are 10 VRAM as a minimum. Because it's ruins locally you don't need to download anything apart from the initial model, this applies to the disk space too.
The podcast of Joe Rogan, episode #1708. Interesting interview, he finds some holes in her theory that she is not able to answer or can't explain. I was very excited with the book before listening, but after it I was kind of disappointed with the book.
Submit you favorite books to ChatGPT, ask for 10 keywords that describe the book.
Then ask for the keywords that repeat more than once and put those keywords into TheStoryGraph.
With this workflow you avoid "hallucinated" books. And thanks to this the worst suggestions are 4/5 stars.