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Comment by barrenko

7 months ago

My nickel - we are in the primary stages of being given something like the famed "bicycle for the mind", an exoskeleton for the brain. At first when someone gives you a mech, you're like "woah, cool", let's see what it can do. And then you zip around, smash rocks, buildings, go try to lift the Eiffel.

After a while you get bored of it (duh), and go back to doing what you usually do, utilizing the "bicycle" for the kind of stuff you actually like doing, if it's needed, because while exploration is fun, work is deeply personal and meaningful and does not sustain too much exploration for too long.

(highly personal perspective)

“Bicycle for the mind” analogy is actually really good here. Since bicycles and other transportation technology has made us increasingly weak, which has a negative impact on physical health. At this point it has reached such a critical point that people are taking seriously the fact that we need physical exercise to be in good health. My company recently introduced 60 minutes a week of activity during work hours. It’s probably a good investment since physical health affects performance and mental health.

Coming back to AI, maybe in the future we will need to explicitly take mental exercise as seriously as we do with physical exercise now. Perhaps people will go to mental gyms. (That’s just a school you may say, but I think the focus could be different: Not having a goal to complete a class and then finish, but continuous mental exercises..)

  • > bicycles ... has made us increasingly weak

    This is pretty difficult for me to buy. Cycling has been shown time & again to be a great way to increase fitness.

    • > Cycling has been shown time & again to be a great way to increase fitness.

      Compared to sitting on your butt in a car or public transport.

      Perhaps not compared to walking everywhere and chasing the antelope you want to cook for lunch.

      I think what he meant is that both bicycles and LLMs are a force multiplier and you still provide the core of the work, but not all of the work any more.

      4 replies →

    • I once had blood clots in my legs. I couldn't walk in the worst parts of it but cycling down the street was easier than walking for more than ten metres. It's better than sitting on your butt for hours on end, sure.

if you will use exoskeleton for walking, eventually you will have muscle wasting and depends on type of exoskeleton degradation of neural pathways that you need to use for walking