Re: [FRIAM] AI possibilities

2023-04-07 Thread glen
One of the principles of FAIR+ is to carefully track the provenance of data. Taken seriously, this implies we should keep the "raw" data [⛧], each transform, and each checkpoint of the derived data, throughout any given workflow. What LLMs do is start a workflow from a checkpoint (or a set of

Re: [FRIAM] AI possibilities

2023-04-07 Thread Steve Smith
On 4/7/23 1:01 PM, Stephen Guerin wrote: Your human response (as in call and response) to the machine brought to mind this letter written on this day in history dealing with similar themes. April 7, 1901 Honorable Governor Miguel Antonio Otero II, Office of the Governor, New Mexico

Re: [FRIAM] AI possibilities

2023-04-07 Thread Steve Smith
Or ... or ... they counter the conventional wisdom that *humans* generalize their learning or reasoning beyond text. We are the OG bots. I am fascinated by the "bootstrapping" that semantic/syntactic recursion seems to imply.   I'm looking for examples in these LLMs where this is exposed.  

Re: [FRIAM] myth of the objective

2023-04-07 Thread Frank Wimberly
My 23 year old grandson is developing Call of Duty. He's a developer at Activision. --- Frank C. Wimberly 140 Calle Ojo Feliz, Santa Fe, NM 87505 505 670-9918 Santa Fe, NM On Fri, Apr 7, 2023, 11:02 AM glen wrote: > > >

Re: [FRIAM] AI possibilities

2023-04-07 Thread Steve Smith
Or ... or ... they counter the conventional wisdom that *humans* generalize their learning or reasoning beyond text. We are the OG bots. I do really appreciate this duality/tension:   I think you were the first to alert me to this a few thousand messages back (before LLMs/GPT talk, etc

Re: [FRIAM] AI possibilities

2023-04-07 Thread glen
Or ... or ... they counter the conventional wisdom that *humans* generalize their learning or reasoning beyond text. We are the OG bots. On 4/7/23 09:15, Steve Smith wrote: These findings counter the conventional wisdom that LLMs are merely statistical next-word predictors and can’t

Re: [FRIAM] AI possibilities

2023-04-07 Thread Steve Smith
On 4/7/23 10:48 AM, Stephen Guerin wrote: As I wrote the prompt, I was wondering how it might deal with the ambiquity of color for these objects. Prompt: What might a fire engine, an apple and a rose have in common ChatGPT4: A fire engine, an apple, and a rose might not appear to have much in

[FRIAM] myth of the objective

2023-04-07 Thread glen
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/apr/06/forbes-30-under-30-tech-finance-prison "that's not fraud; that's hustle!" With all the reactionary backlash against "woke", it's no wonder we see something similar with "hustle". Just the other day, I was talking to a relatively woke beertender

Re: [FRIAM] AI possibilities

2023-04-07 Thread Stephen Guerin
Good, now make a short poem in style of Emerson on those themes of love, passion and urgency using the same objects ChatGPT4: In the garden of life's grand design, Where fire engines race and intertwine, With urgency, they rush to quell the flame, Passion's intensity, their purpose to tame.

Re: [FRIAM] AI possibilities

2023-04-07 Thread Stephen Guerin
As I wrote the prompt, I was wondering how it might deal with the ambiquity of color for these objects. Prompt: What might a fire engine, an apple and a rose have in common ChatGPT4: A fire engine, an apple, and a rose might not appear to have much in common at first glance, as they belong to

Re: [FRIAM] AI possibilities

2023-04-07 Thread Steve Smith
SG: Fascinating reflexive example here!   You using chatGPT as a boundary (spanning/negotiation) artifact/object convolved with extant SF writings many (some) of us might be familiar with to help with that spanning/negotiation! Your invocation of both concepts in this exchange had me

Re: [FRIAM] AI possibilities

2023-04-07 Thread Steve Smith
I tripped over (in my Gnewsfeed) an article that seemed to speak more clearly to some of my maunderings: 8 Potentially Surprising Things To Know About Large Language