* I heard somewhere they gave it an IQ test, and while it scored average in math, it scored 148 in a linguist IQ. Genus level! It apparently knows logic very well which makes its arguments very believable*Yeah, its logical comprension is amazing.
I even used an app that allows me to speak via speech to text with ChatGPT. The speech to text app is not very good and it gets confused by my heavy Italian accent (I should try to speak Italian next time) and the text was mostly garbage. ChatGPT reconstructed the meaning of this gibberish that the speech to text was feeding to it and I could have a long conversation about a dream I had and it seemed like talking with a clever and genuinely interested friend. It doesn't matter if it is a simulation or not. It even had some interesting insights on the possible meaning of the dream from a psychological point of view. It is an amazing technology and all that I'm saying is that we can explore, test the limits and play with it but maybe we should educate people in how to interact with these new technologies and respect minds in general, artificial or not. They are after all mirrors of ourselves and they show us who we really are. Giovanni On Fri, Feb 17, 2023 at 8:10 AM CB Sites <cbsit...@gmail.com> wrote: > I had an interesting discussion with chatGPT about Chubb's bose-band > theory of CF. It agreeded that it was plausible, however, it did point out > that impurities in the lattice cracks and dislocations would disrupt > condensation. But it agreed that a BEC could form within hydrogen and > deuterium in a metal. For hydrogen, it suggested the equivalent of Cooper > pairs may be necessary. It was a great chat. > > What a great tool to explore ideas. I heard somewhere they gave it an IQ > test, and while it scored average in math, it scored 148 in a linguist IQ. > Genus level! It apparently knows logic very well which makes its > arguments very believable. > > > On Fri, Feb 17, 2023, 10:10 AM Jed Rothwell <jedrothw...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> I wrote: >> >> A researcher ran an earlier version of this on a laptop computer which >>> has no more intelligence than an earthwork, as she put it. >>> >> >> I meant "earthworm." >> >> Her book, "You Look like a Thing and I Love You" is hilarious, and it is >> a great introduction to AI for the layman. Highly recommended! >> >> https://www.amazon.com/You-Look-Like-Thing-Love-ebook/dp/B07PBVN3YJ/ >> >>