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Calazon

33 カルマ登録 7 か月前

コメント

Calazon
·昨日·議論
My wife (head of accounting for a small business) has been working on automating large parts of her job using AI.

It's not completely reliable and the human cannot be taken out of the loop, but the number of menial tasks she's been able to automate has been really cool. A lot of processing data that arrives in non-standard formats, generating documents based on that data, etc.

She still has to review everything, but her workload is way down, and when her assistant quit she automated away his whole position.
Calazon
·昨日·議論
[dead]
Calazon
·一昨日·議論
Optional feature, off by default, customizable time interval, and a warning about false alarms?

Even with that you'd likely still trigger false alarms regularly, though they would be the responsibility of the user. Not sure whether it would be a worthwhile tradeoff overall.
Calazon
·一昨日·議論
Not everyone, no, but some people do choose to avoid lifestyle creep, or at least have a lot less of it than their peers. I'm just saying it's optional and not inevitable.
Calazon
·一昨日·議論
Automatic lifestyle creep with promotions? Well, it's definitely not a FIRE simulator.
Calazon
·3 日前·議論
Sure, but arguably education is the easy part. The even harder problem is aligning incentives/values and avoiding a tragedy of the commons sort of situation.
Calazon
·4 日前·議論
If the decision-makers are elected by the people, it's not a dictatorship, no matter how many atrocities the nation commits.

You can have some gray area I guess, with unfair elections or whatever, but when the bad decisions are made by leaders who keep on getting re-elected in reasonably fair elections, we do not have a dictatorship.
Calazon
·6 日前·議論
I suspect because some of these things would require us all to say no, which is difficult to coordinate and enforce.

It's not impossible, but it's not as easy as "just" saying no, as a society.
Calazon
·先月·議論
How do you feel about chess?
Calazon
·2 か月前·議論
I read some of the article and skimmed the rest, and didn't see anything about old-fashioned search no longer being an option.

Is the idea that by making the new AI chat UX the default, that's how they're forcing people into it and making them not able to search? Or is there something I'm missing?
Calazon
·2 か月前·議論
I think that was the idea, that MAGAs would see "price discrimination" as a good thing, but "diverse pricing" as a bad thing.
Calazon
·3 か月前·議論
Exhaustive brute force prompting is completely unfeasible. The number of potential prompts is impossibly large.
Calazon
·3 か月前·議論
Psychologists and therapists have different specialties too, for mental differences. This is generally considered a good thing.
Calazon
·3 か月前·議論
Hopefully he would be using the LLM as an enhanced search engine that can point him to relevant authoritative sources that he can use to fact-check its output. I have done that in the past to some effect.
Calazon
·3 か月前·議論
With that diversity of preferences, some organizations might also be willing and able to do rigorous testing of the updates that are most important to them.

It seems like a helpful efficiency to spread out the testing burden (both deliberate testing and just updating and running into unexpected issues). If everyone updated everything immediately, everyone would be impacted by the same problems at the same time, which seems suboptimal.
Calazon
·3 か月前·議論
If you like Catholicism but struggle with the papacy, have you considered Eastern Orthodoxy?
Calazon
·3 か月前·議論
Do you even use two hands for shortcuts like copy and paste?
Calazon
·3 か月前·議論
> Sometimes the docs straight up lie, and it takes 5 minutes to figure that out. Should they also be ashamed?

Yes.
Calazon
·4 か月前·議論
I feel like we do that pretty regularly in the US.
Calazon
·4 か月前·議論
If 1% of the people in each specialization are advancers, and you add up all the specializations together, then 1% of the total number of people are advancers.

Even this assumes that everyone has a specialization in which 1% of people contribute to the sum of human knowledge. I would probably challenge that. There are a lot of people in the world who do not do knowledge-oriented work at all.