I can't even hide my disdain for the marketers including the word "intelligence".
Fuck AI
"We did it, Patrick! We made a technological breakthrough!"
A place for all those who loathe AI to discuss things, post articles, and ridicule the AI hype. Proud supporter of working people. And proud booer of SXSW 2024.
IT worker here as well, I think I'm the most anti-AI fellow in the place (govt secretary), none of the devs is using AI for coding, but our director uses chatgpt often to make the boring, bureaucratic texts needed to send for higher ups to ignore
I try to just keep my head down, and whenever someone even glances in my direction about an LLM, I point out that my work isn't applicable.
I feel like I have to at work, 100p. Many of my coworkers use it, and I just can't bear it myself. I don't think I've ever used AI in a professional context.
Now, in a non-professional context, like a Twitch stream, hell yeah I use AI. They can say some funny shit!
I don't embrace AI, but I don't necessarily hate it. The problem with AI is that your average user is not going to understand it. This means that they will trust LLMs to do things that LLMs aren't supposed to do. Like when people talked about how an Atari can beat ChatGPT at chess... Of course it can, the Atari program was purpose built to win at chess. ChatGPT was purpose built to aggregate text so you wouldn't have to read multiple sources to get an answer (not always the right answer, but an answer) for your query.
Not hide it, but couch and qualify why I hate it while still using it. As if I have to explain every time the context of "I hate it because I see it sucking in these ways all the time."
Except for people who are also trying to be heavy users and are simply unimpressed.
I'm trying to get a job (and failing) after a layoff at the end of last year, and maybe 1/4 of the job postings I see mention you need to be familiar with "AI." So, yeah, in interviews, when AI is brought up, I try to be pro-AI, but cautious. I even messed around with stuff like LangChain/LangGraph because I see so many job postings that require stuff like that, but the results are underwhelming. Now I'm seeing a lot of job postings that require experience in Azure's cloud AI stuff, but I'm not paying to learn that. I have "real" ML experience, and it frustrates me that many of the responses I get back from applications just want me to glue shitty LLM tools together.
Recent blog in The New Oil nails it. AI is here to stay and also, AI is being rammed in everywhere with billions being spent on it
So was the metaverse though, we have seen massive investments turn to dust in the past. I don't think LLMs will ever go away, but I'm not convinced they'll stick around making no money and burning resources forever.
Oh. I absolutely agree. This bubble will burst creating another massive international stock market fiasco.
My problem is search has become so horrible escpically when looking up tech questions. AI is ok at this at least faster then wading through outdated search results looking for the one that uses the new code.