Saturday, May 11, 2024
Wednesday, April 17, 2024
17: Dua Lipa
Big Tech unites to self-regulate AI . Four giants in artificial intelligence are joining forces to ensure "safe and responsible development of frontier AI models." Anthropic, Google, Open AI and Microsoft (LinkedIn's parent company) announced the formation of the Frontier Model Forum on Wednesday in response to anxieties about AI's power and potential. It will focus on three fronts: setting up best practices, conducting AI safety research, and establishing secure ways of sharing information between companies, governments and stakeholders.
LOL
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) July 26, 2023
There are 7,000 Medical Journal articles published worldwide everyday. How many of them did your physician read this morning? #AIpoweredMedicine
— Peter H. Diamandis, MD (@PeterDiamandis) July 25, 2023
You had one job! pic.twitter.com/wyyAIMtUuy
— Douglas A. Boneparth (@dougboneparth) July 26, 2023
That is how they do it in NY already. #payyourtaxes
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) July 26, 2023
@elonmusk You win. I just blinked. But did wait for X. #bluecheckmark pic.twitter.com/jUkDGGcdFl
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) July 26, 2023
"Imagine: Children just walking into the cafeteria and getting fed. No accounts that parents have to keep up, no time spent assessing families’ incomes or processing payments or running down parents who haven’t paid — no 'lunch shaming' — none of that."https://t.co/fx4gzSxDz9
— Paul Graham (@paulg) July 25, 2023
Google shakes off advertising slump The tech behemoth notched $74.6 billion in second-quarter revenue, up 7% over last year, as the ad market bounces back from a post-pandemic slowdown. Executives cited a strong showing from Google's core search engine business and video platform YouTube. Revenue from Google's cloud business also came in slightly hotter than expected, growing 28% as Google looks to bundle cloud services with new tools powered by generative artificial intelligence. ........... The key for using Homo silicus in research? Careful bias management and data fidelity ........ do cultures tolerate body odor differently?
ChatGPT Is Replacing Humans in Studies on Human Behavior—and It Works Surprisingly Well . an LLM replicated human responses in numerous classical psychology experiments ........ Most online content is dominated by just a handful of languages. An LLM trained on these data could easily mimic the sentiment, perspective, or even moral judgment of people who use those languages—in turn inheriting bias from the training data. ......... faster ways to move data, using ultrafast laser pulses in free space and optical fiber. ....... With electrons, the maximum speed for transmitting data is a nanosecond, one-billionth of a second, which is very fast. But the optical switch we constructed was able to transmit data a million times faster, which took just a few hundred attoseconds........ the James Webb Space Telescope recently transmitted stunning images from far out in space. These pictures were transferred as data from the telescope to the base station on Earth at a rate of one “on” or “off” every 35 nanoseconds using optical communications. ...... someday computers themselves might run on light.
The Digital Future May Rely on Optical Switches a Million Times Faster Than Today’s Transistors
A new partnership to promote responsible AI
Microsoft, Anthropic, Google, and OpenAI launch Frontier Model Forum
I hate discussing politics on Twitter, and it shouldn’t matter what party you belong to. This is just sad and embarrassing for America. Term limits now. I think we can all agree on that. pic.twitter.com/9ruOR7PQf2
— Douglas A. Boneparth (@dougboneparth) July 26, 2023
I've met people who didn't reach their full potential due to lack of schooling, and if the absence of it can harm you, then the presence of it can help you.
— Paul Graham (@paulg) July 26, 2023
Researchers at the University of Toronto used cell phone usage to measure the rebound from Covid in different downtowns, and no big American city's is more than 2/3 of what it was. SF is by far the worst off, at only 1/3 of 2019. pic.twitter.com/Hi9AljI7dJ
— Paul Graham (@paulg) August 13, 2023
"Big roads, big cars, big food, big people."
— Paul Graham (@paulg) August 13, 2023
— 11 yo on America
Zuck responds to @elonmusk pic.twitter.com/TwSqVqcny1
— DogeDesigner (@cb_doge) August 13, 2023
How to prioritize the important things in life.
— Sahil Bloom (@SahilBloom) August 13, 2023
Rocks, Pebbles, & Sand:
There's a rather well-known story that I like to remind myself of every so often.
A professor walks into his class and sets a few items out on the table:
• A large glass jar
• A bunch of rocks
• A… pic.twitter.com/KXiCjhID6l
The scary thing about the speed at which AI is evolving is that it isn't yet mainly evolving itself. The current rate of progress is still driven mainly by improvements in hardware and in code written by human programmers.
— Paul Graham (@paulg) October 1, 2023
Spice up your X posts with random quotation marks:
— Douglas A. Boneparth (@dougboneparth) October 1, 2023
“Congrats” on your baby.
Congrats on “your” baby.
Congrats on your “baby”.
If you get a chance to work with Elon Musk, which company would you choose? pic.twitter.com/bIBYuj7juN
— DogeDesigner (@cb_doge) October 1, 2023
Hiking rates is like printing money: both are ultimately just financial manipulations.
— Balaji (@balajis) October 1, 2023
To truly reduce prices, you need to increase production. pic.twitter.com/UZKEzTxixW
startup advice from my mom:
— anu ☻ (@anuatluru) September 30, 2023
“you need to generate income”
Here's Elon fighting demons in Diablo a while back. He convinced me to try it out. I love it. It somehow is a great stress reliever. I'm a level 52 whirlwind barbarian. If anyone wants to play, let me know. pic.twitter.com/QnO0bmJO6p
— Lex Fridman (@lexfridman) September 30, 2023
Rishi is right. Inflation is taxation. It is how citizens pay for the government’s money printing. https://t.co/W0iQR3Qqm7
— Balaji (@balajis) October 1, 2023
Short-form content captures attention and brings immediate gratification, but it sacrifices lasting enrichment.
— Adam Grant (@AdamMGrant) October 1, 2023
Watching a bunch of reels doesn’t match the full immersion of a movie.
Reading a series of posts doesn’t rival the depth of insight of a book.
Long live long-form.
Yasmin Vossoughian, with a straight face, reports on the fire alarm pulling "'Congressman Bowman did not realize he would trigger a building alarm as he was rushing to make an urgent vote, the congressman regrets any confusion,' just to clarify some things on that." pic.twitter.com/8TbAk5ni71
— Alex Christy (@alexchristy17) September 30, 2023
.... me a contributor too now .. the elixir of life 😳😜🤣 https://t.co/0kT6ss4lEn
— Amitabh Bachchan (@SrBachchan) October 1, 2023
Most movies I've seen, I've seen only partially, in passing, by e.g. sticking my head in the door for a few minutes as someone was watching it, or seeing it out of the corner of my eye on someone else's screen on a plane.
— Paul Graham (@paulg) October 1, 2023
The startup is your movie. A lot of high drama.
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) October 1, 2023
T 4786 - आ गये ।। हर इतवार ।। हमारे द्वार ।। आभार pic.twitter.com/XCcE01ESLa
— Amitabh Bachchan (@SrBachchan) October 1, 2023
If I was putting together a team to make a new viral app, the expectations would be simple:
— Nikita Bier (@nikitabier) October 1, 2023
You will work for 10 hours a day for 7 days a week and put all other life plans on hold for 4 months. In exchange, you will own double digit equity, draw no salary, but 3 meals a day will…
Calling out the unsaid
— Sriram Krishnan - sriramk.eth (@sriramk) October 1, 2023
A few years into my first job, we were doing a product review with a senior executive who was legendary for his temper and for not tolerating dissent. About halfway into the slide deck, the executive looked around and made a suggestion for a new feature.…
Calling out the unsaid
— Sriram Krishnan - sriramk.eth (@sriramk) October 1, 2023
A few years into my first job, we were doing a product review with a senior executive who was legendary for his temper and for not tolerating dissent. About halfway into the slide deck, the executive looked around and made a suggestion for a new feature.…
Things I haven’t done in over seven years of owning a Tesla:
— Pete trains FSD 🤖🚕 (@kylaschwaberow) September 30, 2023
👇👇👇👇
- Gone to the gas station.
- Started my car.
- Unlocked my car door.
- Been to a car dealership.
- Left my house with an empty “tank”.
- Lost a race.
- Worried about car rolling or losing control.… pic.twitter.com/yCKiEv8Xzi
So what was that news I read a few months ago that President Carter died? Vast right-wing conspiracy?
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) October 1, 2023
In 1995, Elon Musk applied for a job at Netscape, sent his resume, but he was too shy to talk to anyone. So he decided to start his own company (Zip2). pic.twitter.com/102YZHWI5r
— DogeDesigner (@cb_doge) October 1, 2023
Wednesday, August 02, 2023
Tuesday, July 25, 2023
X
Elon Musk's X experiment What's next for Twitter, or rather for X? Elon Musk has said it will be "the everything app": Twitter, YouTube, PayPal, TikTok and Amazon all rolled into one.......... Musk believes X can "easily" be a $1 trillion company, according to Isaacson — and he's been mulling some form of the idea for close to 25 years. ......... "Elon Musk has essentially wiped out 15 years of brand value from Twitter and is now essentially starting from scratch."
From Twitter to X: Elon Musk Begins Erasing an Iconic Internet Brand The tech billionaire started removing the bird logo that has been part of Twitter’s identity since 2006....... He has said he hopes to turn Twitter into an “everything app” called X, which would encompass not only social networking but also banking and shopping. .......... When brands become verbs, it’s the “holy grail,” said Mike Proulx, a vice president and research director at Forrester, because it means they have become part of popular culture. ............ Unlike the blue bird, which he described as warm and cuddly but perhaps a bit dated and weighed down by bad press, the new logo is “very harsh” ........... Mr. Musk has long been interested in the X name. In 1999, he helped found X.com, an online bank. The company changed its name after it merged with another start-up to form what would become PayPal. ........... In 2017, Mr. Musk said he had repurchased the X.com domain from PayPal. “No plans right now, but it has great sentimental value to me,” he tweeted at the time. ........ Tesla, Mr. Musk’s electric automaker, also has a sport utility vehicle called the Model X. One of Mr. Musk’s sons, X Æ A-12 Musk, is often called X for short. The holding companies created to close the acquisition of Twitter were named X Holdings. Mr. Musk also leads an artificial intelligence company called xAI.......... At one point, he changed the name of a crowdsourced fact-checking feature to “Community Notes” from “Birdwatch.” He recently also had someone cover the w in Twitter’s name at its San Francisco headquarters. .
ChatGPT Is Replacing Humans in Studies on Human Behavior—and It Works Surprisingly Well
The Digital Future May Rely on Optical Switches a Million Times Faster Than Today’s Transistors
And soon we shall bid adieu to the twitter brand and, gradually, all the birds
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 23, 2023
— ᵞⁱᵏᵉˢ (@TrueBeefSupreme) July 23, 2023
...but I just got used to it. Maybe improve it a little, make it more fierce! pic.twitter.com/oViV0xKurR
— Alex Utopia (@alexutopia) July 23, 2023
Has everybody seen the (eXecrable) new logo? 👀🙄#ByeByeBirdie 🕊️#TaTaTwitter 👋 pic.twitter.com/Bwc2P4h4fS
— Mark Hamill (@MarkHamill) July 24, 2023
Thanks PayPal for allowing me to buy back https://t.co/bOUOejO16Y! No plans right now, but it has great sentimental value to me.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 11, 2017
That's probably the best use
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 11, 2017
Still got the mug pic.twitter.com/ey30gJhMwx
— Jeremy Stoppelman (@jeremys) July 11, 2017
Memories.... pic.twitter.com/PbUcZMRXiS
— Maye Musk (@mayemusk) July 11, 2017
Memories.... pic.twitter.com/RjUYmZzQXN
— Maye Musk (@mayemusk) July 11, 2017
Not sure what subtle clues gave it way, but I like the letter X pic.twitter.com/nwB2tEfLr8
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 23, 2023
it's definitely not "essential". but you can make an argument for reconsideration being the best path forward. the twitter brand carries a lot of baggage. but all that matters is the utility it provides, not the name.
— jack (@jack) July 24, 2023
Warming Could Push the Atlantic Past a ‘Tipping Point’ This Century The system of ocean currents that regulates the climate for a swath of the planet could collapse sooner than expected, a new analysis found.
Sunday, July 23, 2023
23: Ethan Mollick
I had an https://t.co/YlWxt8eneu bank account once.
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) July 23, 2023
In A.I. Race, Microsoft and Google Choose Speed Over Caution Technology companies were once leery of what some artificial intelligence could do. Now the priority is winning control of the industry’s next big thing. ........... They wrote in several documents that the A.I. technology behind a planned chatbot could flood Facebook groups with disinformation, degrade critical thinking and erode the factual foundation of modern society. ............ Dr. El Mhamdi, a part-time employee and university professor, used mathematical theorems to warn that the biggest A.I. models are more vulnerable to cybersecurity attacks and present unusual privacy risks because they’ve probably had access to private data stored in various locations around the internet. .......... He resigned from Google this year, citing in part “research censorship.” He said modern A.I.’s risks “highly exceeded” the benefits. “It’s premature deployment,” he added. ......... concerns with chatbots: They could produce false information, hurt users who become emotionally attached to them and enable “tech-facilitated violence” through mass harassment online. .......... Satya Nadella, Microsoft’s chief executive, made a bet on generative A.I. in 2019 when Microsoft invested $1 billion in OpenAI. After deciding the technology was ready over the summer, Mr. Nadella pushed every Microsoft product team to adopt A.I. ........... Microsoft has released new products every week, a frantic pace to fulfill plans that Mr. Nadella set in motion in the summer when he previewed OpenAI’s newest model. He asked the chatbot to translate the Persian poet Rumi into Urdu, and then write it out in English characters. “It worked like a charm,” he said in a February interview. “Then I said, ‘God, this thing.’”
On holding back the strange AI tide There is no way to stop the disruption. We need to channel it instead ......... Most people didn’t ask for an AI that can do many tasks previously reserved for humans. But it arrived, almost completely unexpectedly, eight months ago with ChatGPT, and has been accelerating ever since............ the substantial benefits of AI are going to be greatly reduced by trying to pretend it is just like previous waves of technology. ........... Large Language Models are here, now. In their current form, they show tremendous ability to impact many areas of work and life. ........ the AIs we have today are going to bring a lot of change........ In conversations with educational institutions and companies, I have seen leaders try desperately to ensure that AI doesn’t change anything. .......... Many organizational leaders don’t yet understand AI, but those who do see an opportunity are eager to embrace it… as long as it doesn’t make anything too weird. .......... AI, as currently implemented, is not really built for centralization ......... GPT-4, the most advanced AI available, is free for everyone in 169 countries through Bing, or for a small charge from OpenAI ........... By trying to make AI like all other technologies, companies are ignoring how transformative it is. One person can do a tremendous amount of work (see how much marketing I could get done with a 30 minute time limit), but it is also different work: tedious tasks are outsourced, interesting tasks are multiplied. The nature of work with AI shifts in way that uncomfortable, risky, and potentially powerful. ............. Jussi Kemppainen of Dinosaurs Are Better, who is developing an entire adventure game, alone. To do that, he is using AI help for every aspect of game design, from character design to coding to dialog to graphics3. He is inventing his own workflows to make this happen, and is able to do that because he is not limited to corporate work systems. .......... There is no way for companies to harness this kind of power and creativity without, in some way, democratizing control over AI. Only innovation driven by workers can actually radically transform work, because only workers can experiment enough on their own tasks to learn how to use AI in transformative ways. And empowering workers is not going to be possible with a top-down solution alone. .......... Nobody really knows anything about the best ways to use AI, and they certainly don’t know the best ways to use it in your company. Only by diving in, responsibly, can you hope to figure out the best use cases..........
Almost every assignment, at every level, can be done, at least in part, by AI.
........ AI can do high-quality work. It can do math. It makes far fewer obvious mistakes. And it is capable of working with vast amounts of data. .......... I pasted in my entire last book into Claude 2 ....... Given this challenge, many teachers want to turn back the clock: blue book exams. Handwritten essays. Oral exams. .......... We are very close to the long-term dream of tutoring at scale, and many other advances promise to make the lives of teachers easier, while improving outcomes for students and parents. .......... we need to articulate a vision for what radically changed education could look like .......... we need to start with the presumption that we are facing genuine, and widespread, disruption across many fields ........... The scientists and engineers designing AI, as capable as they are, have no particular expertise on how AI can best be used, or even how and when it should be used. We get to make those decisions. But we have to recognize that the AI tide is rising, and that the time to decide what that means is now........... 8% Americans own crypto. 2% of Americans have bought an NFT. VR numbers are a bit sketchy, but maybe 20% of Americans have tried it. 19% of Americans in a survey had tried ChatGPT by April. .........Rookie leaders are stressful: Poll
How to Use AI to Do Stuff: An Opinionated Guide Covering the state of play as of Summer, 2023 ......... Claude 2, likely the second most capable AI system available to the public. The week before, Open AI released Code Interpreter, the most sophisticated mode of AI yet available. .......... When we talk about AI right now, we are usually talking about Large Language Models, or LLMs. Most AI applications are powered by LLMs, of which there are just a few Foundation Models, created by a handful of organizations. Each company gives direct access to their models via a Chatbot: OpenAI makes GPT-3.5 and GPT-4, which power ChatGPT and Microsoft’s Bing (access it on an Edge browser). Google has a variety of models under the label of Bard. And Anthropic makes Claude and Claude 2. .......... Code Interpreter as is an extremely powerful version of ChatGPT that can run Python programs. If you have never paid for OpenAI, you have only used 3.5. .......... Microsoft’s Bing uses a mix of 4 and 3.5, and is usually the first model in the GPT-4 family to roll out new features. For example, it can both create and view images, and it can read documents in the web browser. It is connected to the internet. Bing is a bit weird to use, but powerful. ........... Claude is most notable for having a very large context window - essentially the memory of the LLM. Claude can hold almost an entire book, or many PDFs, in memory. ............ For right now, GPT-4 is still the most capable AI tool for writing, which you can access at Bing (select“creative mode”) for free or by purchasing a $20/month subscription to ChatGPT. Claude, however, is a close second, and has a limited free option available. ......... Microsoft Office will include a copilot powered by GPT and Google Docs will integrate suggestions from Bard. The implications of what these new innovations mean for writing are pretty profound. ......... Use it like an intern to write emails, create sales templates, give you next steps in a business plan, and a lot more. .........
It can generate entirely false content that is utterly convincing.
.............. Particularly dangerous is asking it for references, quotes, citations, and information for the internet ......... Midjourney, which is the best system in mid-2023. It has the lowest learning-curve of any system: just type in "thing-you-want-to-see --v 5.2" (the --v 5.2 at the end is important, it uses the latest model) and you get a great result. Midjourney requires Discord. Here is a guide to using DiscordPower and Weirdness: How to Use Bing AI Bing AI is a huge leap over ChatGPT, but you have to learn its quirks ......... Overall, Bing is immensely more powerful than ChatGPT, but also a lot weirder to use.
Setting time on fire and the temptation of The Button We used to consider writing an indication of time and effort spent on a task. That isn't true anymore. ...... there are a million implications to outsourcing our first drafts to AI. ......... We may not learn how to write as well. We may be flooded with low-quality content. .......... Take, for example, the letter of recommendation. Professors are asked to write letters for students all the time, and a good letter takes a long time to write. ........ you may actually be hurting people by not writing a letter of recommendation by AI, especially if you are not a particularly strong writer. ......... With everyone pushing The Button for most emails, documents, and even (soon!) spreadsheets and presentations, what documents mean is going to change fundamentally, and that is going to spill over to our work. ........... People who use AI enjoy work more, and feel that they are better able to use their talents and abilities. ........ We start to create documents mostly with AI that get sent to AI-powered inboxes where the recipients respond mostly with AI. Even worse, we still create the reports by hand, but realize that no human is actually reading them. This kind of meaningless task, what organizational theorists have called mere ceremony, has always been with us. ............. Stripping away meaningless work removes a huge burden from workers, while reducing inefficiencies and broken processes. This is an amazing opportunity, but only if we are forward-thinking about the future of a world where most work starts by pressing The Button.
Saturday, July 22, 2023
22: Emad
Post by @paramendraView on Threads
I've been hiding behind my keyboard for 4 months.
— Alessio (@alematit) July 20, 2023
Afraid my accent was too strong.
Then I hosted my 1st Space:
• 10X inbound DMs
• 5X my confidence
• 2X case studies
Guess what?
What you call INSECURITY.
Your audience calls it PERSONALITY.
Build with your VOICE.
Automation
— MATT GRAY (@matt_gray_) July 20, 2023
Automations are the glue for all your systems.
With tools like:
• Zapier
• Airtable
• Calendly
• ChatGPT
There's likely an automation for every task.
Save time. Save hassle. Keep winning.
New habit I've picked up:
— Dickie Bush 🚢 (@dickiebush) July 20, 2023
Relistening to old podcast episodes (2 years or older).
I've been digging through the archives to find ones that had a huge impact
on me when I heard them for the first time.
The insights hit different at this point in the journey.
C02
— Linus (●ᴗ●) (@LinusEkenstam) July 19, 2023
Where does it come from? Where does it go?
NASA's satellite constellations & advanced computer models give us a first deep look at it 😱
🧵 Let's dive in pic.twitter.com/sFf7YRVc2V
Here we have a look at Asia. Here we see the build up of C02 in the atmosphere over a year (2021) pic.twitter.com/9rfg6CNpRy
— Linus (●ᴗ●) (@LinusEkenstam) July 19, 2023
We turn our heads towards Africa & Europe. Pretty wild to see the green dots (carbon captured by land) and blue dots, carbon captured by the oceans. pic.twitter.com/vULnpRgIZ2
— Linus (●ᴗ●) (@LinusEkenstam) July 19, 2023
Now let's take a holistic look at the entire planet. This is CO2 emission for all of 2021, cut down to 1min 37sec.
— Linus (●ᴗ●) (@LinusEkenstam) July 19, 2023
Green/Blue dots are carbon captured by land and sea (about 50% of human made emissions get gobbled up by the planet). pic.twitter.com/kzMWsyQhmU
Here we can see the same data in the different levels and how they build up over the year. pic.twitter.com/iIgxUYNppt
— Linus (●ᴗ●) (@LinusEkenstam) July 19, 2023
AI video has started to produce mindblowing results and could eventually disrupt Hollywood. (PT20)
— Nathan Lands (@NathanLands) July 20, 2023
Here are the best AI videos I've found:
Honored to be part of @POTUS's announcement today on a set of voluntary commitments on AI safety & security, which we and other AI labs have been working on with the White House.
— Greg Brockman (@gdb) July 21, 2023
Step towards coordination both today and for future very powerful systems: https://t.co/PZoTVaTZYy pic.twitter.com/hOCOx2myOx
Post by @paramendraView on Threads
Post by @paramendraView on Threads
