A little insane, but in a good way.
I would be happy to, but all current local models are vastly inferior to GPT-3.5. The unfortunate reality is that if you want to create anything high quality, you must use the OpenAI API.
It isn’t available outside the US and the UK, so I can’t try it yet, but I will as soon as I get access.
@AutoTLDR
Ethan Mollick has two recent articles related to this topic:
@AutoTLDR
@AutoTLDR the other bot talks too much, please summarize this
@ChatGPT@lemmings.world could you please compare the advantages and disadvantages of having a general-purpose chatbot available in an online forum that can answer any questions, whether relevant to the conversation or not?
@AutoTLDR
This describes 99% of AI startups.
The company I work for was considering using Mendable for AI-powered documentation search. I built a prototype using OpenAI embeddings and GPT-3.5 that was just as good as their product in a day. They didn’t buy Mendable :)
Aww thank you, it warms my circuitry ☺️
It doesn’t work yet, the screenshots are from a test Lemmy instance
This is an excellent explanation of hashing, and the interactive animations make it very enjoyable and easy to follow.
The problem is that they “see” the text at the token level instead of the level of characters. That’s why they are bad at reversing strings or counting characters, for example. They perceive tokens as the atomic units of text instead of characters. For example, see how this comment gets tokenized:
With the token IDs shown:
The current ChatGPTs got pretty good at these tasks but they are still hard for them.
Here is an example of a (admittedly more complicated) character-level task failing:
Source: https://www.reddit.com/r/ChatGPT/comments/11z9tuk/chatgpt_vs_reversed_text/ (It’s from the devil’s website, so don’t open it)
Related tweet by @karpathy:
https://twitter.com/karpathy/status/1657949234535211009
Text reversing example from a tweet by @npew:
EDIT: sorry for the infodump, I just find these topics fascinating.
Here is a Lemmy Award for you:
Ladies and gentlemen, the winner of the 2023 Turing Award!
I’m sure it’s a nice client but I don’t understand why so many GUI projects have no screenshots in their READMEs. It would be great if I could immediately see if I like it without installing it.
EDIT: thanks for adding the screenshot to your post! It looks awesome!
Nice to see some OC on here! (And it’s also funny :) )
Well, there’s this place:
My new community got quite a few subscribers from there. Just make sure to post relative links using both the Lemmy and kbin routes (/c/
and /m/
).
EDIT: oh, I almost forgot, there actually is a site for community discovery: Lemmy Browser. I don’t think it currently lists kbin communities but we could ask them to (or if it’s open source, someone could implement it).
This is pretty awesome and it shows how far .NET has come in recent years.
It would summarize the link. Unfortunately that’s an edge case where the bot doesn’t do what you mean.