> > No speech interface as far as I can tell, but FYI, there now is at....
Emerson by Quickchat has a speech interface integration to GPT models. - https://www.quickchat.ai/emerson <https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqbm5BaEVPdXdIVGFveGNTb3MxTG9vcnlOelFKZ3xBQ3Jtc0ttRWJnZGt4dWJqWHpKLUtRM1REZmtvd2FwWWk3YmtteDJrRHNMZHVJdjdRYmtwdmg2UmdHTGd3OWZOYmRnWUJEY09LSk1YSms0Q3NfOW11aWVlbmpBY2JiTUxjcldSOGhmUmZRamprVXFISWR5Yy1yNA&q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.quickchat.ai%2Femerson&v=5DBXZRZEBGM> Some sample videos by Dr Alan D. Thompson. Leta, GPT-3 AI - Episode 1 (Five things, Art, Seeing, Round) - Conversations and talking with GPT3 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5DBXZRZEBGM Leta, GPT-3 AI - Episode 10 (GPT-J, GPT-3, GPT-2 questions, facts, general knowledge) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V0pceNYgELE Br, -- Kimmo Virtanen, Zache On Sun, Dec 25, 2022 at 11:22 PM Erik Moeller <eloque...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Sun, Dec 25, 2022 at 1:00 AM Anders Wennersten > <m...@anderswennersten.se> wrote: > > For me the only question is of Google come first (who has better > knowledge how to interface > > backend knowledge repositories the Wikipedia will become) or if chatGPT > will learn this > > No speech interface as far as I can tell, but FYI, there now is at > least one search engine that already integrates a language model based > chatbot into search: https://you.com/, which has the backing from > Salesforce founder & billionaire Marc Benioff (a bit more: > https://www.protocol.com/you-dot-com-benioff). Unlike ChatGPT, it > tries to directly cite web sources. When that source is Wikipedia, > you'll note it's basically rewriting/summarizing the Wikipedia > article. I don't know if it uses GPT underneath or its own language > model; Salesforce has certainly funded the creation of models of its > own. > > When I asked You.com if it uses GPT-3, it said yes. When I asked it to > provide a source, it generated a URL that does not exist. > > I also observed other failure modes, such as combining multiple > persons with the same name into one, or giving directly contradictory > answers to the same question being asked repeatedly. All of these > failure modes are characteristic of language models, which are a bit > like pinball machines in that they will generate results > nondeterministically from the training data. > > Of course, this is the technology as it exists today, and even with > those limitations in mind it can prove useful (though it seems > irresponsible to market it as part of a search engine in its current > form). > > Warmly, > Erik > _______________________________________________ > Wikimedia-l mailing list -- wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org, guidelines > at: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Mailing_lists/Guidelines and > https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia-l > Public archives at > https://lists.wikimedia.org/hyperkitty/list/wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org/message/FAGXGQAMO6DHAANORKLHEY6DKHEL33UW/ > To unsubscribe send an email to wikimedia-l-le...@lists.wikimedia.org >
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