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Agreed, but I think my point pretty much stands. 15 years ago, IBM built a special system for Jeopardy which won, but only by (kinda) cheating. Today, IBM could (probably) build a system which wins without having things rigged in its favor. In other words, AI has arguably caught up with the hype from 15 years ago.
It seems to me that in another X years (5? 15?) it's highly likely that AI will catch up with today's hype.
And at the rate the tide is rising, Denver will have beachfront property by then too!
This argument is very tiresome -- a new architecture for language models was developed around five years ago, and companies have since then been hyping it to the moon and feeding it approximately all the data that exists in the world. It's entirely plausible that current SOTA is roughly as far as this approach will go.
Tiresome or not, it's at least somewhat consistent with the history of computing.
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