zlacker

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1. throwa+(OP)[view] [source] 2023-11-18 13:17:05
> There is "coding" and there is "God's spark genius of algorithms" kind of work.

I really don't buy that for a second. Most of OpenAI's value compared to any competitor comes from the money they spent hiring humans to trawl through training data.

replies(3): >>elzbar+t1 >>motobo+l4 >>ameliu+h6
2. elzbar+t1[view] [source] 2023-11-18 13:24:40
>>throwa+(OP)
Not to forget the mind-boggling amount of computing power and the megabucks spent on power bills. If anything, smaller groups and open source seem to get very good results with far less money.
3. motobo+l4[view] [source] 2023-11-18 13:38:15
>>throwa+(OP)
And their competition didn’t had the same resources?
replies(1): >>suziem+0x
4. ameliu+h6[view] [source] 2023-11-18 13:50:34
>>throwa+(OP)
The God's spark of genius are the transformers which came from Google and are now in the open.
replies(1): >>suziem+Fw
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5. suziem+Fw[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-11-18 16:25:42
>>ameliu+h6
Look where for example Lukasz Kaiser is now [OpenAI]. Google had a culture issue when it came to "delivering brilliance". It was a bit "you do it as a singleton contributor" or you don't. OpenAI put a number of such brilliant people working together on one goal, silently, for quite some time, and we all see the results.
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6. suziem+0x[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-11-18 16:27:42
>>motobo+l4
This is a handful of people we are talking about. The top algorithimic world is incredibly small.

In short, either they didn't or where unable to create a favorable enough environment for this to flourish.

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