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Every week it feels like a new AI tool drops promising to “revolutionize” everything, from replacing your job to folding your laundry. On one hand, these systems can do things that were science fiction a few years ago: generating code, writing essays, creating art, analyzing medical scans, even building entire apps from a prompt.
But there’s a strange paradox. The same AI that can architect a microservice architecture in seconds might completely mess up a basic multiplication problem or confidently give you the wrong year for a historical event. It’s like having a genius who occasionally forgets what 2 + 2 is.
This raises a bigger question: are we seeing the true limits of current AI, or is the “intelligence” mostly marketing gloss? The hype cycle paints AI as nearly omniscient, but in reality, it’s more like a high-powered pattern matcher with a talent for sounding human , and a tendency to hallucinate when pushed outside its comfort zone.
Of course, dismissing it entirely would also be a mistake. For complex, multi-step tasks in programming, design, and analysis, AI is already saving people hours (and in some cases, days) of work. But maybe the real revolution isn’t replacing humans, it’s amplifying the humans who know how to work around the AI’s quirks.
So, where do you stand? Are we living in the age of the most overhyped tech since 3D TVs, or is this just the awkward teenage phase before AI really grows up?
Both.
Capabilities get overhyped as leadership of each of the large AI companies - and some of the smaller ones - spend disgusting amounts of fiat that need to be justified to current and future shareholders. They will gladly ride doomer panic waves to exaggerate the capabilities of their products and land higher valuations, attract more investment and skim off the top.
At the same time, the industry is not even teenage or infantile; it's not even truly born yet. The I in AI is currently not really there. It's just an extrapolation framework that emulates conversation (or action), not intelligence. We need a dozen fundamental breakthroughs for that I to really take form. Just realize that even a small LLM like llama3.2 has multiples more encodings of words and their relations than you have, it can emulate knowledge about tons more subjects. But it doesn't have actual knowledge. It's a hack, to deceive you, and it does that by following patterns of conversation that seem as a conversation to you, but at the core, there is nothing there that can be as insightful as even the youngest, pre-school child.
LLMs are databases, with a fuzzy search engine built-in. They aren't intelligence.
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100 sats \ 4 replies \ @Akg10s3 9 Aug
I'm at the point where I recognize the usefulness of AI in a multitude of situations. However, I still don't like the fact that it's used for medical treatments or laboratories. I believe that human beings deserve to be cured or treated by other human beings!
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I still don't like the fact that it's used for medical treatments or laboratories.
Agreed, but not because of the use of technology, but simply the way it's used, and the other technologies used (ie surveillance tech) and bad security practices of the platforms that provide this. There are some specific platforms that try to improve this, but I've spoken to many a doctor that just uses a regular chatgpt subscription. Normally I would cheer at this great equalizer, but chatgpt feels like facebook on steroids on the side of the shady things they do and likely will do, see for a recent example #1068670
I believe that human beings deserve to be cured or treated by other human beings!
Interesting. Let me defend the other side of this.
Have you ever been misdiagnosed by a human doctor? I have, over a decade ago. I experience pain every minute of every hour of every day because of their error and the way I live my life had to be changed because of it. if - which probably means not yet - any technology can reduce errors made by doctors, then I'm a fan.
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100 sats \ 2 replies \ @Akg10s3 9 Aug
I respect your answer!
And my answer is no, not yet! I must say that I'm in average health! And to date, I've never had a serious accident or one that required an implant, surgery, or a procedure that has put me on the sick leave list for months...
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I really hope that it stays that way!
Even though we're definitely not there yet, I'd wish for everyone (even people I extremely dislike) diagnostic certainty and not having to deal with other humans that you're supposed to trust screwing with your health. The worry is that right now, it's very possible for some overhyped LLM to screw with your health, and that is as bad. Bottom line, this needs to be handled with care.
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100 sats \ 0 replies \ @Akg10s3 9 Aug
I agree with you 👌
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My honest take is that AI has a lot of potential, but very different from what is being hyped, and perhaps not useful to the vast majority of people who just seem to want a way to use their brain less and less.
My specific case is related with research in mathematical physics. Even last year, all llms were basically useless to me. This year, I constantly use them for brainstorming and producing boilerplate proofs of simple (but useful) lemmas. Of course, I supervise the output carefully, but I am now sufficiently able to optimise my pipeline in such a way that checking is faster than producing everything from scratch myself.
I strongly believe that there are brilliant people doing research in AI now, and this will result in AI (not only llms) being more and more useful for creative people.
The elephant in the room, however, is the issue of regulating the use of AI and the companies developing and selling AI solutions. This, I reckon, will be a total shitshow.
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I believe AI is best used for processing a huge chunk of repeating data, that's definitely where it excels. Also not half-bad for programming, but it'd probably make spaghetti code in the long run.
Good for saving hours on a task that anyone can do but nobody wants to do, but it's not reliable enough (yet) to do tasks that people actually STRUGGLE to do. I could ask AI to arrange my Excel spreadsheet and it'll do it completely fine, I could also ask AI to program me a rudimentary script on Python that does something very specific and small. Ask any more or less, and it'll barf up a random answer confidently.
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