angrysaveruk
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Back and to the left..
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Post by angrysaveruk on Jan 2, 2023 18:01:34 GMT
Read alot about AI but thought it was all hype until I tried this Elon Musk funded project: chat.openai.com/ . This thing is so smart it is scary. I had quite a detailed discussion about how it works seems to know alot about itself and told me it loves riddles which it seems to solve easily even if they are a bit cryptic. Also seems to be able to write and understand code so can probably adjust its own source code.
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mrk
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Post by mrk on Jan 2, 2023 20:37:45 GMT
Read alot about AI but thought it was all hype until I tried this Elon Musk funded project: chat.openai.com/ . This thing is so smart it is scary. I had quite a detailed discussion about how it works seems to know alot about itself and told me it loves riddles which it seems to solve easily even if they are a bit cryptic. Also seems to be able to write and understand code so can probably adjust its own source code. It's not really smart, it just pretends to be. In fact it has a tendency to generate answers that sound very plausible, but are actually completely inaccurate. This article puts it well: ChatGPT is a bullshit generator. But it can still be amazingly useful.
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angrysaveruk
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Post by angrysaveruk on Jan 2, 2023 21:02:59 GMT
Depends what you mean by smart it can answer questions that involve combining unrelated subject matters and certainly knows how to produce code that it writes itself. I asked it to give me a solution that involved statistics, a fairly cryptic riddle and programming and it managed to do what I wanted. I first told it to give me the code in C then I said do it again in Fortran - no problem. I dont think it is going to win a Nobel prize any time soon but impressive all the same. Definitely worth checking out if you are interested in seeing what all the AI hype is about.
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littleoldlady
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Running down all platforms due to age
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Post by littleoldlady on Jan 2, 2023 23:01:21 GMT
Example:
Q. what comes next 1,4,10,20,35,56,84?
A. The pattern in the sequence you provided is that each term is the sum of the previous three terms. Based on this pattern, the next term in the sequence would be 120, which is the sum of 84, 56, and 35. Therefore, the next term in the sequence is 120.
120 is actually correct but the explanation is total rubbish.
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mrk
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Post by mrk on Jan 3, 2023 0:06:23 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Jan 3, 2023 1:35:17 GMT
Depends what you mean by smart it can answer questions that involve combining unrelated subject matters and certainly knows how to produce code that it writes itself. I asked it to give me a solution that involved statistics, a fairly cryptic riddle and programming and it managed to do what I wanted. I first told it to give me the code in C then I said do it again in Fortran - no problem. I dont think it is going to win a Nobel prize any time soon but impressive all the same. Definitely worth checking out if you are interested in seeing what all the AI hype is about. I messed about with it a bit. It seems to be very good at solving problems where there are ALREADY plenty of existing examples online. It behaves like a souped up search engine - good at organising google results. I asked it a more complex programming problem that didnt have examples available online. It replied - I would solve the problem like this - research it, then implement it.I asked it for a concrete example. void doSomething(){ // implement this method}Yeah thanks, I would never have thought of that myself
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adrianc
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Post by adrianc on Jan 3, 2023 8:40:54 GMT
Turing test still being failed badly, then, nearly 75 years after it was defined.
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warn
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Curmudgeon
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Post by warn on Jan 3, 2023 9:07:06 GMT
Turing test still being failed badly, then, nearly 75 years after it was defined. Oh, I don't know -- some of your posts nearly have me convinced...
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Post by bracknellboy on Jan 3, 2023 9:13:39 GMT
Example: Q. what comes next 1,4,10,20,35,56,84? A. The pattern in the sequence you provided is that each term is the sum of the previous three terms. Based on this pattern, the next term in the sequence would be 120, which is the sum of 84, 56, and 35. Therefore, the next term in the sequence is 120. 120 is actually correct but the explanation is total rubbish. Still, I've met some humans that might have written that....
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jonno
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nil satis nisi optimum
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Post by jonno on Jan 3, 2023 9:32:41 GMT
Turing test still being failed badly, then, nearly 75 years after it was defined. Oh, I don't know -- some of your posts nearly have me convinced... Careful warn.................That's a very slippery slope!! Happy New Year adrianc
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adrianc
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Post by adrianc on Jan 3, 2023 9:38:46 GMT
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angrysaveruk
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Back and to the left..
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Post by angrysaveruk on Jan 3, 2023 10:29:09 GMT
It is only a neural network so it doesnt know everything but it can do alot pretty cool things. For example:
Q: write a function in C that takes two arrays of the same size and adds them together and puts the answer back into the first.
A: Here is an example of a function in C that takes two arrays of the same size, adds the elements together, and stores the result back in the first array:
void add_arrays(int *arr1, int *arr2, int len) { int i; for (i = 0; i < len; i++) { arr1 [ i ] = arr1 [ i ] + arr2 [ i ]; } }
It did not look this up on the internet. Still in the development phase but I am impressed.
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Post by Ace on Jan 3, 2023 10:34:00 GMT
It is only a neural network so it doesnt know everything but it can do alot pretty cool things. For example:
Q: write a function in C that takes two arrays of the same size and adds them together and puts the answer back into the first.
A: Here is an example of a function in C that takes two arrays of the same size, adds the elements together, and stores the result back in the first array:
void add_arrays(int *arr1, int *arr2, int len) { int i; for (i = 0; i < len; i++) { arr1 = arr1 + arr2; } }
It did not look this up on the internet. Still in the development phase but I am impressed.
It's been a long time since I wrote any C code, so I'm probably wrong, but wouldn't this fail as it never increments the array pointers?
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angrysaveruk
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Back and to the left..
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Post by angrysaveruk on Jan 3, 2023 10:48:51 GMT
It is only a neural network so it doesnt know everything but it can do alot pretty cool things. For example:
Q: write a function in C that takes two arrays of the same size and adds them together and puts the answer back into the first.
A: Here is an example of a function in C that takes two arrays of the same size, adds the elements together, and stores the result back in the first array:
void add_arrays(int *arr1, int *arr2, int len) { int i; for (i = 0; i < len; i++) { arr1 [ i ] = arr1 [ i ] + arr2 [ i ] ; } }
It did not look this up on the internet. Still in the development phase but I am impressed.
It's been a long time since I wrote any C code, so I'm probably wrong, but wouldn't this fail as it never increments the array pointers? for some reason this forum does not allow you to use [ ] . I have put spaces in and it works now. It got the answer correct. Worth checking out as long as you not expecting to meet "HAL" or "Deep Thought" like some of the people on this forum.
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registerme
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Post by registerme on Jan 3, 2023 11:05:53 GMT
It did not look this up on the internet. Still in the development phase but I am impressed. Are you sure about that? Microsoft's Github's Co-pilot uses ChatGPT and it definitely scrapes Github for code (and has current legal issues as a result). I'm not saying you're wrong, just...
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