• nroth@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    “Built to do my art and writing so I can do my laundry and dishes” – Embodied agents is where the real value is. The chatbots are just fancy tech demos that folks started selling because people were buying.

    • bradd@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Eh, my best coworker is an LLM. Full of shit, like the rest of them, but always available and willing to help out.

    • nroth@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Though the image generators are actually good. The visual arts will never be the same after this

      • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Compare it to the microwave. Is it good at something, yes. But if you shoot your fucking turkey in it at Thanksgiving and expect good results, you’re ignorant of how it works. Most people are expecting language models to do shit that aren’t meant to. Most of it isn’t new technology but old tech that people slapped a label on as well. I wasn’t playing Soul Caliber on the Dreamcast against AI openents… Yet now they are called AI opponents with no requirements to be different. GoldenEye on N64 was man VS AI. Madden 1995… AI. “Where did this AI boom come from!”

        Marketing and mislabeling. Online classes, call it AI. Photo editors, call it AI.

        • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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          2 months ago

          I wasn’t playing Soul Caliber on the Dreamcast against AI openents…

          Maybe terminology differs by region, but I absolutely played against AI as a kid. When I set up a game of Command and Conquer or something, I’d pick the number of AI opponents. Sometimes we’d call them bots (more common in FPS) or “the computer” or “CPU” (esp in Civ and other TBS), but I distinctly remember calling RTS SP opponents “AI” and I think many games used that terminology during the 90s.

          What frustrates me is the opposite of what you’re saying, people have changed the meaning of “AI” from a human programmed opponent to a statistical model. When I played against “AI” 20-30 years ago, I was playing against something a human crafted and tuned. These days, I don’t play against “AI” because “AI” generates text, images, and video from a statistical model and can’t really play games. AI is something that runs in the cloud, with maybe a small portion on phones and Windows computers to do simple tasks where the network would add too much latency.

        • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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          2 months ago

          It’s easy to switch.

          That said, I think the comment is constructive. It used to be that websites, textbooks, etc would pay artists or pay for stock photos (which indirectly pays artists), but now they can gen a dozen or so images and pick their favorite.

          I’m not saying this is good or bad, but I do agree that art will never be the same.