• @OldWoodFrame
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    373 months ago

    The paradox of tech right now “we are going to build the most complex technology known to man into our product in the next 12 months. Are we hiring record numbers of people to get it done? No. We fired a bunch of people and everyone else will just have to be extremely hardcore.”

    • @Blisterexe@lemmy.zip
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      03 months ago

      They’re refocusing on Firefox and continuing the ai stuff they were already doing. They fireded people who were working on fediverse and metaverse platforms. Did you even read the article?

        • @veng@lemmy.world
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          -33 months ago

          It’s literally a marketing term for a bunch of structured algorithms at this stage - not some sentient witchcraft

            • @veng@lemmy.world
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              43 months ago

              I guess the point is that its complexity is overrated, but still definitely not ‘simple’.

            • @Miaou@jlai.lu
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              3 months ago

              … It is simple, the idea exists since 40y ago, it’s just being done at scale

              Edit: make it 80 actually

        • @Miaou@jlai.lu
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          13 months ago

          I bet I know much more on the topic than you, but please enlighten me on which part of this is complex?

          The core concepts of DNNs are taught in high-school, and putting them together can done by a Bachelor student. Shit, people often advise writing a NN libraries as a good learning exercise when picking up a new programming language.

          I think mathematically illiterate people assume that incredible results necessarily imply complexity, but that’s simply not the case here. Or the idea that unknown things are necessarily complex, maybe.

          The main reason DNNs are popping up is because we finally have the hardware for it. And the second reason is that tech companies have the resources (both financial and in terms of available data) to throw at it.