Comment by aurareturn 5 hours ago He said "will stop anytime soon". He didn't say forever. 8 comments aurareturn Reply Lionga 5 hours ago Which still makes no sense. There is the same chance we are flatlining now as that we are flatlining in e.g. 3 years or 5 years. squidbeak 4 hours ago In what sense are the models flatlining? nicoburns 2 hours ago In the sense that the incremental improvements in capabilities that we've been seeing in recent models seem to taking exponentially growing amounts of compute to achieve. 5 replies →
Lionga 5 hours ago Which still makes no sense. There is the same chance we are flatlining now as that we are flatlining in e.g. 3 years or 5 years. squidbeak 4 hours ago In what sense are the models flatlining? nicoburns 2 hours ago In the sense that the incremental improvements in capabilities that we've been seeing in recent models seem to taking exponentially growing amounts of compute to achieve. 5 replies →
squidbeak 4 hours ago In what sense are the models flatlining? nicoburns 2 hours ago In the sense that the incremental improvements in capabilities that we've been seeing in recent models seem to taking exponentially growing amounts of compute to achieve. 5 replies →
nicoburns 2 hours ago In the sense that the incremental improvements in capabilities that we've been seeing in recent models seem to taking exponentially growing amounts of compute to achieve. 5 replies →
Which still makes no sense. There is the same chance we are flatlining now as that we are flatlining in e.g. 3 years or 5 years.
In what sense are the models flatlining?
In the sense that the incremental improvements in capabilities that we've been seeing in recent models seem to taking exponentially growing amounts of compute to achieve.
5 replies →