In my opinion, Musk used to have the golden touch. But his Twitter takeover and its aftermath shows he has lost it. And it looks like he’s becoming more and more like Howard Hughes in his later life in that his oddness and eccentricities seem to keep increasing. We’ll see if that happens or not.
Elon says[1] the AI assistant will be part of X premium for $16/month.
More importantly:
>Grok is an AI modeled after the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, so intended to answer almost anything and, far harder, even suggest what questions to ask!
I'm a big fan of both, but using a Robert Heinlein word to name something you say is based on a Douglas Adams idea is weird.
He's that guy in your group who makes references to things he doesn't actually understand. This is the same guy that said the Cybertruck is what "Bladerunner" would drive. There is no such character named Bladerunner, his name is Deckard.
> I'm a big fan of both, but using a Robert Heinlein word to name something you say is based on a Douglas Adams idea is weird.
This doesn't have anything to do with your point. It's just that I see people call things "weird" all the time on this forum. The way you've framed it comes off as a criticism, but is something being weird a bad thing?
No paper and not open source (yet?). I wonder how this is compatible with the lofty goals of furthering research and 'maximally benefit all of humanity'.
There’s no details here about training, evaluation, reproducibility or even architecture.
OpenAI’s GPT4 tech report was a marketing press release in disguise; I felt it represented a huge step down for the field in terms of academic rigour. But this model card epitomizes the end conclusion of LLM commoditization: no attempt to quantify limitations or weaknesses, portraying model biases and hateful/hallucinatory output as a feature rather than a bug, all wrapped up in breathless language of wanting to “maximally benefit humanity” while hiding the model behind a secretive waitlist or a $16 Twitter premium subscription plan.
The idea of optimizing an AI product to use humour and sarcasm is actually very clever because a lot of people mistake sarcasm for intelligence.
But wryness aside, having it present itself to the user up front as potentially misleading, via humour, is probably the best way to operate over human minds anyway. Wit engages your own wit and critical faculties. If you are funnier than this AI, you are exercising your intelligence. Edward Tufte's old "the cognitive style of powerpoint" essay was about how the tech Microsoft used created generations of drones who thought in cliches and bullet points, whereas if Grok can actually challenge people via wit, we could actually get some enhancing effects from it. Psyched for this anyway. Congrats.
Seems to be GPT-3.5 level. Not sure why anyone would pay for that given ChatGPT has a free plan, Claude, Bard, and the whole world of open source models.
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[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 56.5 ms ] threadMore importantly:
>Grok is an AI modeled after the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, so intended to answer almost anything and, far harder, even suggest what questions to ask!
I'm a big fan of both, but using a Robert Heinlein word to name something you say is based on a Douglas Adams idea is weird.
1: https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1720839331365929290
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bladerunner
This doesn't have anything to do with your point. It's just that I see people call things "weird" all the time on this forum. The way you've framed it comes off as a criticism, but is something being weird a bad thing?
OpenAI’s GPT4 tech report was a marketing press release in disguise; I felt it represented a huge step down for the field in terms of academic rigour. But this model card epitomizes the end conclusion of LLM commoditization: no attempt to quantify limitations or weaknesses, portraying model biases and hateful/hallucinatory output as a feature rather than a bug, all wrapped up in breathless language of wanting to “maximally benefit humanity” while hiding the model behind a secretive waitlist or a $16 Twitter premium subscription plan.
What a boring release, to be honest.
Consider how good Elon is at pulling in talent and reducing complexity. Very exciting stuff.
But wryness aside, having it present itself to the user up front as potentially misleading, via humour, is probably the best way to operate over human minds anyway. Wit engages your own wit and critical faculties. If you are funnier than this AI, you are exercising your intelligence. Edward Tufte's old "the cognitive style of powerpoint" essay was about how the tech Microsoft used created generations of drones who thought in cliches and bullet points, whereas if Grok can actually challenge people via wit, we could actually get some enhancing effects from it. Psyched for this anyway. Congrats.