Comment on Moore’s Law for AI. Is there such a thing?
Chruesimuesi@feddit.ch 1 year ago
Some in the AI industry have proposed concepts similar to Moore’s Law to describe the rapid growth of AI capabilities.
Although there is no universally accepted law or principle akin to Moore’s Law for AI, people often refer to trends that describe the doubling of model sizes or capabilities over a specific time frame.
For instance, OpenAI has previously described a trend where the amount of computing power used to train the largest AI models has been doubling roughly every 3.5 months since 2012.
nydas@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Thank you!
But does that equate to the power of AI doubling every 3.5 months?
neuromancer@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Nemo@midwest.social 1 year ago
uh, maybe if you forgot about natural language processing
neuromancer@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Buffalox@lemmy.world 1 year ago
AI made very little progress for 40 years from the 70’s, basically just some basic pattern recognition like OCR in the 80’s.
Up until recently AI development has been extremely underwhelming, especially compared to what we hoped back in the 80’s.
Although results are pretty impressive, autonomous cars are still a hard nut to crack.
Most impressive IMO are the recent LLMs (Large Language Model), but these results are very recent, compared to the many decades research has been done to develop better AI.
Honestly an AI beating a human at chess is not that impressive AI research IMO, as it’s an extremely narrow task, you can basically just throw computational power at. Still for many years that was the most impressive AI achievement.