geht aber nur mit GPT-4, oder?Fleischmütze hat geschrieben: ↑Freitag 17. November 2023, 21:49 Habe das Gefühl, einige haben noch nicht mitbekommen, was seit einer Woche alles möglich ist.
Mit folgendem prompt
mich interessieren die Meinungen der User auf www.Politik-Forum.eu zum Thema chatGPT
ChatGPT
Moderator: Moderatoren Forum 4
- sunny.crockett
- Beiträge: 3927
- Registriert: Sonntag 25. Februar 2018, 15:52
Re: ChatGPT
"Der Ansatz für Multikulti ist gescheitert, absolut gescheitert!" (Zitat Angela Merkel 2010)
"Dann sind die nicht insolvent, aber sie hören auf zu verkaufen." (Zitat Robert Habeck 2022)
"Dann sind die nicht insolvent, aber sie hören auf zu verkaufen." (Zitat Robert Habeck 2022)
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- Beiträge: 7
- Registriert: Samstag 26. Oktober 2019, 13:49
Re: ChatGPT
Nein, die aktuellen KI-Modelle sind LLMs, die können vieles, aber nicht wirklich gut rechnen.sunny.crockett hat geschrieben: ↑Sonntag 26. November 2023, 09:37 Bei Mathematischen Berechnungen funktionierte doch eigentlich ChatGPT ganz gut
Das, was ChatGPT gut kann, ist wahrscheinlich eine qualitativ zufriedenstellende Antwort zu geben.
Der User kann mit der Gestaltung des prompts diese Wahrscheinlichkeit beeinflussen.
Wenn man versteht, wie die KI arbeitet, kann man seine prompts optimieren.
Fehler in dem Sinne macht die KI nicht, ab und an ist aber die Qualität der Antwort offensichtlich schlecht.
Aber eigentlich spielt die KI einfach ihren Streifen runter. Prompt, Eingabe, und die KI folgt den antrainierten Algorithmen.
Wirklich rechnen kommt aber bald, der nächste (schon entscheidende?) Schritt zu AGI ist wahrscheinlich schon da.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Q*
ganz frisch der Eintrag, da kommt noch was …
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- Beiträge: 7
- Registriert: Samstag 26. Oktober 2019, 13:49
Re: ChatGPT
wow, das wurde bei wikipedia sofort wieder gelöscht, im Cache habe ich folgendes
Q* (pronounced "Q-star") is an alleged unreleased project by OpenAI dedicated to the application of artificial intelligence in logical and mathematical reasoning. In November 2023, certain employees of OpenAI reportedly raised concerns with the company's board, suggesting that Q* might signify the imminent emergence of artificial general intelligence.[1] The reported work involves performing math on the level of grade-school students.[1][2][3]
OpenAI spokesperson Lindsey Held Bolton contested this perspective in a statement conveyed to The Verge, stating, "Mira told employees what the media reports were about but she did not comment on the accuracy of the information." Additionally, a source familiar with the situation informed The Verge that the board never received a letter regarding such a groundbreaking development, and the progress of the company's research did not factor into Altman's abrupt termination.[4]
Reaction from others in the field of AI were also dismissive when it came to claims of artificial general intelligence (AGI). François Chollet, an AI Researcher at Google with work on how to achieve greater generality in artificial intelligence,[5] noted "Every single month from here on there will be rumors of AGI having been achieved internally. Just rumors, never any actual paper, product release, or anything of the sort. The first panic over imminent AGI was circa 2013 about Atari Q-learning by DeepMind. The second one was circa 2016 over Deep RL (partially triggered by AlphaGo)."[6][7] Yann LeCun, Chief AI Scientist at Meta, described the rumors as a "deluge of complete nonsense about Q*."[8]
Q* (pronounced "Q-star") is an alleged unreleased project by OpenAI dedicated to the application of artificial intelligence in logical and mathematical reasoning. In November 2023, certain employees of OpenAI reportedly raised concerns with the company's board, suggesting that Q* might signify the imminent emergence of artificial general intelligence.[1] The reported work involves performing math on the level of grade-school students.[1][2][3]
OpenAI spokesperson Lindsey Held Bolton contested this perspective in a statement conveyed to The Verge, stating, "Mira told employees what the media reports were about but she did not comment on the accuracy of the information." Additionally, a source familiar with the situation informed The Verge that the board never received a letter regarding such a groundbreaking development, and the progress of the company's research did not factor into Altman's abrupt termination.[4]
Reaction from others in the field of AI were also dismissive when it came to claims of artificial general intelligence (AGI). François Chollet, an AI Researcher at Google with work on how to achieve greater generality in artificial intelligence,[5] noted "Every single month from here on there will be rumors of AGI having been achieved internally. Just rumors, never any actual paper, product release, or anything of the sort. The first panic over imminent AGI was circa 2013 about Atari Q-learning by DeepMind. The second one was circa 2016 over Deep RL (partially triggered by AlphaGo)."[6][7] Yann LeCun, Chief AI Scientist at Meta, described the rumors as a "deluge of complete nonsense about Q*."[8]
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- Beiträge: 7
- Registriert: Samstag 26. Oktober 2019, 13:49
Re: ChatGPT
ja, dafür braucht’s den www-Zugang, geht nur bei GPT 4 turbo, knapp 23 Tacken im Monat, aktuell limitiert, gibt wohl ne Warteliste.