She may be right. I landed on DeviantArtdotcom while looking around for new background art for my laptop and found an A.I. generated picture of a ‘57 Corvette. It had one headlight on the passenger’s side and three headlights on the driver’s side. It was a nice picture, but it looks like spelling isn’t the only thing A.I. doesn’t understand.
“Generative AI” ain’t AI. In the ’60s, Feigenbaum created a checkers program. He could beat it, but it learned (swapped) strategies and began winning. Last I heard, only one guy could beat the program. A team, also in the ’60s, wrote a program to write geometry proofs (remember those from high school?). They asked it to write a proof for a well-known theorem and it solved it in a new way, shortening the standard proof.
Not really true. I was in computer programming and engineering for about 40 yrs before retiring, and I was part of a team that developed an early Expert System and reported on upcoming Artificial Intelligence. Once the AI is trained on the info set the system does “think” independently, and is not constrained by any human developed algorithm (unless you consider the algorithm used to train it on the dataset). My problem with current level of AI is that it has no logical constraints (hence seven figured humans in its created images).
My fiend, a professional photographer, used AI to generate a few pictures of herself to try it out, they turned out gorgeous. She said navigating wasn’t the hard part, exiting it was. Dunno what that means but it sounds like a challenge.
a sage 5 months ago
Now that’s scary.
NRHAWK Premium Member 5 months ago
She may be right. I landed on DeviantArtdotcom while looking around for new background art for my laptop and found an A.I. generated picture of a ‘57 Corvette. It had one headlight on the passenger’s side and three headlights on the driver’s side. It was a nice picture, but it looks like spelling isn’t the only thing A.I. doesn’t understand.
Skeptical Meg 5 months ago
“Generative AI” ain’t AI. In the ’60s, Feigenbaum created a checkers program. He could beat it, but it learned (swapped) strategies and began winning. Last I heard, only one guy could beat the program. A team, also in the ’60s, wrote a program to write geometry proofs (remember those from high school?). They asked it to write a proof for a well-known theorem and it solved it in a new way, shortening the standard proof.
That’s what I’d call AI.
joannepowers Premium Member 5 months ago
Not really true. I was in computer programming and engineering for about 40 yrs before retiring, and I was part of a team that developed an early Expert System and reported on upcoming Artificial Intelligence. Once the AI is trained on the info set the system does “think” independently, and is not constrained by any human developed algorithm (unless you consider the algorithm used to train it on the dataset). My problem with current level of AI is that it has no logical constraints (hence seven figured humans in its created images).
tammyspeakslife Premium Member 5 months ago
My fiend, a professional photographer, used AI to generate a few pictures of herself to try it out, they turned out gorgeous. She said navigating wasn’t the hard part, exiting it was. Dunno what that means but it sounds like a challenge.