Comment by rho4
16 hours ago
This. Speed determines whether I (like to) use a piece of software.
Imagine waiting for a minute until Google spits out the first 10 results.
My prediction: All AI models of the future will give an immediate result, with more and more innovation in mechanisms and UX to drill down further on request.
Edit: After reading my reply I realize that this is also true for interactions with other people. I like interacting with people who give me a 1 sentence response to my question, and only start elaborating and going on tangents and down rabbit holes upon request.
> All AI models of the future will give an immediate result, with more and more innovation in mechanisms and UX to drill down further on request.
I doubt it. In fact I would predict the speed/detail trade-off continues to diverge.
> Imagine waiting for a minute until Google spits out the first 10 results.
what if the instantaneous responses make you waste 10 min realizing they were not what you searched for?
I understand your point, but I still prefer instantaneous responses.
Only when the immediate answers become completely useless will I want to look into slower alternatives.
But first "show me what you've got so far", and let me decide whether it's good enough or not.
I am already at that point. when I need to search something more complex than exact keyword match, I don't even bother googling it anymore, I just ask chatgpt to research it for me and read it's response 5 min later.
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Grok fast is fast but doing a lot of stupid stuff fast actually ends up being slower