Comment by famouswaffles
6 days ago
Yes, a "moderately interesting" Open problem.
I can't think of any chores that would take an expert months to complete. I can't think of any chores that I've completed but was then 'unconvinced could work'. Please sit down and think about what you are saying here. Are we still talking about chores ?
One of the more strange phenomena with machines getting better and the incessant need (seemingly driven by human exceptionalism) to downplay each result, is that you just end up belittling humans in the process.
This is significant. Your analogy is wrong. It's fine to admit it.
Writing a complex parser or certainly a compiler is a 1 - 3 month project, for example.
Again, I'm not trying to downplay this, but to frame this accurately. I think an AI being able to build a parser/ compiler is cool too.
> One of the more strange phenomena with machines getting better and the incessant need (seemingly driven by human exceptionalism) to downplay each result, is that you just end up belittling humans in the process.
I don't believe in human exceptionalism at all, don't attribute positions to me.
>Writing a complex parser or certainly a compiler is a 1 - 3 month project, for example.
1. Estimating time completion of something that has been done multiple times before and an open problem that has not yet been solved is a different matter entirely. 1 to 3 months is an educated guess and more likely than not, an underestimate.
2. I do not think months long complex compilers and parsers are being routinely completed by LLMs as your original comment implied. Regardless, they are different classes of problems.
I don't get what either of your points is intended to demonstrate. Let's revisit the first post I replied to:
> It's deeply surprising to me that LLMs have had more success proving higher math theorems than making successful consumer software
As far as I can tell, they absolutely have not had more success in this area relative to making successful consumer software.
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