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flornt

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From Semantic Ablation to Attentional Ablation

reflexions.florianernotte.be
2 points·by flornt·vor 3 Monaten·1 comments

Writing with LLM is not a shame

reflexions.florianernotte.be
107 points·by flornt·vor 11 Monaten·147 comments

From Overwhelmed to on Top: How Managers at Upflow Get Things Done

upflow.io
1 points·by flornt·vor 12 Monaten·0 comments

LLMs are more persuasive than incentivized human persuaders

arxiv.org
140 points·by flornt·letztes Jahr·116 comments

Asking a LLM for help is fine

reflexions.florianernotte.be
1 points·by flornt·letztes Jahr·0 comments

Republicans push for a decadelong ban on states regulating AI

theverge.com
13 points·by flornt·letztes Jahr·13 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by flornt·letztes Jahr·0 comments

Ask HN: If 1 person can control 10 AI agents, why would still need that person?

4 points·by flornt·letztes Jahr·22 comments

comments

flornt
·vor 11 Monaten·discuss
Thanks. Really appreciate your comments. It opens some perspectives I haven't considered and gives more things to think about regarding this. I'll digest it and update the content based on your observations!
flornt
·letztes Jahr·discuss
I really regret Omnivore....
flornt
·letztes Jahr·discuss
I guess it's because LLM does not understand the meaning as you understand what you read or thought. LLMs are machines that modulate hierarchical positions, ordering the placement of a-signifying sign without a clue of the meaning of what they ordered (that's why machine can hallucinate :they don't have a sense of what they express)
flornt
·letztes Jahr·discuss
Sure. And I'am pretty much convinced that we'll have more and more tools to build things from plain language. These tools will have some extended questions to grasp what really are the user's intentions.
flornt
·letztes Jahr·discuss
see my answer below.I guess it's not quite the same thing. Self-service checkouts are just a way to buy your groceries — same with online shops. In both cases, the human is (or was) mainly there to help sell a product, not to deliver a service in the proper sense. Sure, you could argue that it’s still a form of service, but the core business of a company like Walmart isn’t about providing human services — it’s about selling goods.
flornt
·letztes Jahr·discuss
What you’re referring to is the difference between automation — following the rules — and autonomy — having the ability to break or adapt them. A traditional machine just follows instructions. It doesn’t make decisions on its own. But from what I understand, AI agents can show a certain level of autonomy. They don’t just execute predefined steps; they can adjust, prioritize, even improvise within a given framework.
flornt
·letztes Jahr·discuss
Sure, but once the solution is built, why would a company keep paying someone externally just to watch/control it? Won’t the future be about having an AI agent that can be fine-tuned to your company’s needs through natural language?"
flornt
·letztes Jahr·discuss
Yes, but it's not exactly the same. Self-service checkouts are just a way to buy your groceries — same with online shops. In those cases, the human is simply involved in selling a product, not delivering a service in itself. What I'm thinking about is an AI agent that actually provides services the way a human would — like doing strategic monitoring, replying to emails, or producing documents as part of an AI-enabled workflow."