Depends on your work, what you’re trying to do, and how you use it.
As a developer I run my own local version of Dolphin Mixtral 8x7B (LLM) and it’s great at speeding up my productivity. I’m not asking for it to do everything all at once but usually just small snippets here and there to see if there’s a better or more efficient way.
I, for one, am looking forward to hardware improvements that can help us run larger models, so news like this is very welcome.
But you are correct, a large number of companies misunderstand how to use this technology when they should really be treating it like someone at an intern level.
It’s great to give small and simple (especially repetitive) tasks, but you’ll still need to verify everything.
Madrigal@lemmy.world 7 months ago
Just give it a couple of years for the hype/boom/bust cycle to complete, then it’ll settle down and people will start using the tech appropriately.
guy_threepwood@lemmy.world 7 months ago
Yep, in the exact same was as blockchain: nowhere.
hoshikarakitaridia@lemmy.world 7 months ago
Unlike block chain, there is a solid chunk of new use cases to be conquered with AI. These might be very technical in nature, but for example, text suggestions on smartphones might already be done with AI, depending on your OS.
micka190@lemmy.world 7 months ago
We already have text prediction that works more efficiently (from a power and computing point of view) by using things like trees.
There’s very few use-cases I’ve seen where AI is more efficient than an algorithm, and it’s mostly in areas where it does a bunch of tests/research/simulation inputs by throwing random shit at the wall that users wouldn’t normally try really fast.
AI is basically useless when you’re doing something that’s easily repeatable, because it’s easier to actually implement tools that use algorithms to do that kind of thing.
zaph@sh.itjust.works 7 months ago
That could explain why SwiftKey sucks now
Shnog@lemmy.world 7 months ago
Google and partners have been showing off some pretty cool use cases for Gemini, mostly related to GCP, at Next 24.