On Tuesday, November 26th, 2024 at 8:54 PM, Tomas Kuchta 
<[email protected]> wrote:

> On Tue, Nov 26, 2024, 23:33 Ben Koenig [email protected] wrote:
> 
> > On Saturday, November 23rd, 2024 at 1:38 AM, mo [email protected]
> > wrote:
> > 
> > > I am setting up a gaming PC for my friend's son. I bought/acquired
> > > everything, mostly from PDX Hackerspace. I have an ASUS Republic of
> > > Gamers
> > > (ROG) Rampage II Gene mb. I bought a 500GB SSD M.2 for it b/c
> > 
> > https://www.google.com/search?q=does+asus+republic+of+gamers+rampage+ii+gene+have+m.2+ssd
> > 
> > > says it has an M.2 slot, but I cannot find the slot!
> > > ...
> > 
> > Out of curiosity, did you read any of the links provided by that search or
> > did you just go off the AI summarized answer?
> > .
> 
> ... Snip ...
> 
> > Billions of $$$, petabytes of training data, and the AI still can't handle
> > a basic specifications question. Wow.
> 
> 
> It all depends how you read/understand the I in contemporary AI!
> 
> -T

Cute commentary aside, it isn't a matter of Intelligence of any kind. LLM based 
software is designed to take in data, then regurgitate that data when 
requested. It's a storage model for large  unstructured data sets.

In this case it's not even the usual garbage in, garbage out. The source data 
should be fine but it incorrectly parses the query, then fails to take into 
consideration the search results. Which is extra funny because if all it did 
was summarize the classic results... it would have gotten the answer right.

Google appears to be going the way of Microsoft. They are so focused on 
shipping the product that what they end up shipping is broken. I'm sure as hell 
not clicking the little button to tell them why their algorithm is busted 
unless they send me a paycheck.
-Ben

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