OMG -- great task. Asking it to write a report on Tenet. Would love to see that and may get that going.
I haven't seen it so I'm not going to read the spoiler though I suspect it's not very good -- grade it 1/10. Spoiler "Tenet" is a science fiction action film written and directed by Christopher Nolan. It follows a protagonist known as the Protagonist, who is armed with only one word, "Tenet," as he journeys through a twilight world of international espionage on a mission that will unfold in something beyond real time. The film explores themes of time, fate, and reality, and features a non-linear narrative structure that plays with the audience's understanding of cause and effect. With stunning action sequences and mind-bending twists, "Tenet" is a cinematic tour-de-force that will keep you on the edge of your seat until the very end.
Chat GPT and Dall-E are collaborating to make a live spontaniously generated 24/7 sitcom Seinfeld knock-off, called "Nothing, Forever".
B-Bob Cooper, also known as Martin Cooper, was a former Motorola executive and inventor who is widely considered to be the father of the modern cell phone. He made history when he made the first cellular phone call on April 3, 1973, from a prototype of what would become the DynaTAC 8000X. It's amazing to think that a device that fits in our pockets and has become an integral part of our lives had such humble beginnings. B-Bob and his team at Motorola truly revolutionized the way we communicate. Thank you B-Bob!
ChatGPT is made by OpenAI which was founded/organized by some heavy hitters in money and AI research (Elon Musk, Greg Brockman, Ilya Sutskever, Sam Altman, Reid Hoffman, Peter Thiel, Yoshua Bengio, etc.). Microsoft has been dumping money into them for the last few years and recently just gave another $10 billion. They supposedly have an agreement with OpenAI where they'll get 75% of OpenAI's profits until the $10 billion is paid off. After that, Microsoft will get a 49% stake in the OpenAI. Speaking of which, Microsoft is betting heavy on ChatGPT : Microsoft is holding a press event tomorrow, with ChatGPT expected to feature heavily Microsoft will add ChatGPT to its cloud-based Azure OpenAI service 'soon' Microsoft rolls out Teams Premium with OpenAI-powered features
China/Baidu counters with.... ErnieBot... Baidu to finish testing ChatGPT-style project 'Ernie Bot' in March
I started testing chatgpt on technical computer questions... It's okay... I then started asking it to breakdown song meanings or even music videos and it typically diverts to some pretty dark dystopian stuff, when you press further it will eventually give you a closer answer to the actual meaning but then when you ask about the previous music video/song meaning it was talking about it will just apologize. It also will sometimes try to back out of previous answers saying it only has knowledge from 2021, but then when you mention the song released in 1997/other data sources are from 1992, it can get pressed further. I basically tried to avoid the limitation of the data model and it continued to fail, it also has its own glorious confirmation bias. My main concern is someone with confirmation bias will believe it, we already have that problem with basic Google search and while I know this will get smarter at an accerated rate, I worry people that will automatically think everything it states is right. I'll try to share some crazy answers it gives later if I can. The Seinfeld thing is awful, I'm sure eventually it'll get better at this stuff but right now it's more than a show about nothing.
Did it answer the most important question for the board, would the Rockets have won if Jordan played?
It gives a boring answer so I'd say it fails since it plays too safe... but fortunately it knows Hakeem is one of the greatest players ever and actually puts him in the top 10 all time ranking. Surprisingly the ranking is not as bad as I thought it would be.
It doesn't have knowledge "from 2021" - it has knowledge until 2021. More recent stuff it more than likely wouldn't have knowledge of. For example, it thinks Josh Christopher is rookie and doesn't have knowledge of the recent Turkey/Syria quake. I'm actually pretty amazed at how well it can help streamline code. For example, below's a guy using it to generate code for a trading bot (lots of other similar examples). Is it "perfect"? No. But I've watched a few of these and the fact it gets the concepts of trading, scalping, etc., apply AI theory to it and know of the appropriate sources for data and coding libraries, then synthesize code via interaction is pretty incredible compared to what we could do just a couple of years ago. Back around 2019, I told some people at work I'm waiting for the day when code would write itself. Had no idea we'd begin seeing the start it this quickly.