---nom---
---nom--- t1_jd75658 wrote
Reply to comment by OkSoBasicallyImDumb in AI creating Games by 2farzzz
Err.. for one it often steals code, but always snippets. And usually it doesn't work. We've got plenty of bad code it's generated in the programming humour subreddit.
---nom--- t1_j7u6nlv wrote
Reply to San Diego startup to build 3D printing factory that would almost triple its workforce by Gari_305
3d printing a workforce of employees is such good idea. You may not even need to pay them.
---nom--- t1_j6pipms wrote
Reply to Why AI can not replace search index by shanoshamanizum
You can't just inject bias into an algorithm. They've just blocked certain types of questions and give a generic response largely manually written.
Google rarely gives me what I'm searching for these days.
Chatgpt is overall a bit better for specific questions, but not websites.
---nom--- t1_j5pfw37 wrote
Reply to "By far the greatest danger of Artificial Intelligence is that people conclude too early that they understand it."- Eliezer Yudkowsky. by KiwiTechCorp
AI isn't everywhere. They're just algorithms. If they're smart, I'll gladly call them intelligent. But Google's photo ai can't determine a rabbit from a dog. Chatgpt can't finish off some simple number sequences, and many questions it just makes false assumptions. Wall-e has been a little more reliable, but it's really taking a lot of pre-existing images and smudging them together.
Still a believer in true AI being organically grown rather than emulated using machines.
---nom--- t1_j5pde09 wrote
Reply to comment by Runktar in How will more complex sensations be programmed for full-dive/brain interface VR? by Choice_Card
To map signals, you'd have to be able to identify what synapses contain what memories. You can bet your life everyone is different and is observed differently.
Although by monitoring someone doing a specific activity, like moving a limb - you could potentially mimick this person's action. So who knows, maybe we'll calibrate such a device using this method. But it may be difficult to target this part of the brain specifically.
Considering our smart phones and apps are so jam full of bugs, I don't hold much hope for such technology. Imagine the sort of bugs you could observe with such tech, super invasive bugs too.
---nom--- t1_j5pbrt2 wrote
Reply to How will more complex sensations be programmed for full-dive/brain interface VR? by Choice_Card
We're so very far off such things, I suspect we'll have to artificially grow modified human brains with an interface we can tap into.
Considering funding is waning for VR investment and games, I'm not so convinced VR will continue to advance. And going for things like taste and stuff is way out of our realm of possibility, and may always be. We don't really understand the brain still, and we may never due to how complex &vast it is, we also have limitations on our organic brains.
We don't even have real AI like many things claim to implement, they're largely neural networks/algorithms. You can't even get chatgpt to successfully continue a relatively easy sequence of numbers without it giving a false value. And it writes all stories in roughly the same structure. Heck, if you tell it to write Star Wars episode 10, it'll resurrect Luke Skywalker.
---nom--- t1_j0ywi16 wrote
Reply to comment by KeithGribblesheimer in Humans could one day live in Manhattan-sized asteroid megacities by Gari_305
How about freezing sperm, putting it in an artificial womb and then feeding through a tube and teaching the baby. 😅
---nom--- t1_j0yw9hj wrote
Reply to Sci-Fi Movies In The Future? by Producedinchina
Well movies are becoming less relatable and more eye candy with no substance. The sums up modern Marvel, Fast & Furious and just about everything else.
South Korea on the other hand keeps it real.
---nom--- t1_ivzs0uw wrote
The US becomes a dictatorship like Russia. The people who cried out for free speech will ban it. If you've ever been on "Truth Social", you'll know only people in certain countries can log in and there's only a list of their approved people in the people list.
---nom--- t1_jd75bre wrote
Reply to Could you train a local AI chatbot (like the local GTP 3 that you can download and train) on things like building codes to assist tradesmen? by jdog1067
At the moment it has a habbit of generating fake facts which are quite convincing. Technical things and nuances in a prompt - it hiccups on from time to time.