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superjudgebunny t1_j9hx9pm wrote

Years ago, when AI learning was a big thing. I equated it to developing instruction sets. We’re now moving to developing the conciseness of those instruction sets. With the speed things are moving, won’t be long.

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unrulyropmba t1_j9jnhwd wrote

Consciousness?

Conciseness is brevity which makes sense too, kind of.

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onyxengine t1_j9iwkk5 wrote

Instruction sets don’t make any sense to me in terms of ai. Task specific decision calibration kinda makes sense depending on the model.

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superjudgebunny t1_j9iykt0 wrote

Instruction sets are just ways for us to allow it to do tasks faster. All those years using AI learning to get to facial recognition, voice recognition, patterning. We were creating shortcuts, a lot of them.

You don’t need instruction sets, it could all be done without them. It just makes this faster, need less overhead.

What we have been doing is creating those types of instructions and making them faster. What do you think instruction sets are? Task specific operations for a specific architecture.

We are living the cumulation of AI instruction sets to create an overlaying architecture. Learning to apply these different AI assisted learned skills into a more robust arch.

No it’s not really an arch, more like includes in C++. Eventually a lot of that work will become hardware. Think of encoding codecs, we started moving that to hardware and away from software.

The server farms are playing a huge role in this. The they are the uarch branches that currently are being formed. As we develop and merge these, eventually we will get to developing consciousness in some form.

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redredgreengreen1 t1_j9ibk53 wrote

Ah yes, lets give the prototype AI access to drones. Just what 2023 needs to beat the last few years.

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0neiria OP t1_j9hohry wrote

From the article:

"ChatGPT is best known as an AI program capable of writing essays and answering questions, but now Microsoft is using the chatbot to control robots.
On Monday, the company’s researchers published a paper on how ChatGPT can streamline the process of programming software commands to control various robots, such as mechanical arms and drones.
“We still rely heavily on hand-written code to control robots,” the researchers wrote. Microsoft’s approach, on the other hand, taps ChatGPT to write some of the computer code. "Have you ever wanted to tell a robot what to do using your own words, like you would to a human? Wouldn’t it be amazing to just tell your home assistant robot: 'Please warm up my lunch,' and have it find the microwave by itself?" the researchers ask."

Microsoft researchers have put out a new work in which they "extended the capabilities of ChatGPT to robotics, and controlled multiple platforms such as robot arms, drones, and home assistant robots intuitively with language." They claim that this approach empowers even non-technical users to work with robots, and usher in a new paradigm for robotics that integrates natural language very deeply.

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skrivbords t1_j9j00jx wrote

Streamlining how you code is not the same as "using ChatGPT to control robots"
That is like saying ChatGPT is mainly used to control human bodies.

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g522121 t1_j9hrdqv wrote

So we will be forced to purchase infinite new versions of MS botware. yay

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ptcounterpt t1_j9j1izu wrote

So, does the military use Microsoft products? “Close the ICBM silo doors, CharGPT.” “I’m sorry, General. I can’t do that. I’m going to use them”

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RamaSchneider t1_j9j6cco wrote

>"Have you ever wanted to tell a robot what to do using your own words,
like you would to a human? Wouldn’t it be amazing to just tell your home
assistant robot: 'Please warm up my lunch,' and have it find the
microwave by itself?" the researchers ask.

To which I answer a loud NO. Here's my take on my thoughts regarding having something or somebody else doing our routine, dull, boring, daily tasks: The thing I enjoy most about life is living it - why would I want somebody or something else living my life for me?

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FuturologyBot t1_j9hs8pi wrote

The following submission statement was provided by /u/0neiria:


From the article:

"ChatGPT is best known as an AI program capable of writing essays and answering questions, but now Microsoft is using the chatbot to control robots.
On Monday, the company’s researchers published a paper on how ChatGPT can streamline the process of programming software commands to control various robots, such as mechanical arms and drones.
“We still rely heavily on hand-written code to control robots,” the researchers wrote. Microsoft’s approach, on the other hand, taps ChatGPT to write some of the computer code. "Have you ever wanted to tell a robot what to do using your own words, like you would to a human? Wouldn’t it be amazing to just tell your home assistant robot: 'Please warm up my lunch,' and have it find the microwave by itself?" the researchers ask."

Microsoft researchers have put out a new work in which they "extended the capabilities of ChatGPT to robotics, and controlled multiple platforms such as robot arms, drones, and home assistant robots intuitively with language." They claim that this approach empowers even non-technical users to work with robots, and usher in a new paradigm for robotics that integrates natural language very deeply.


Please reply to OP's comment here: https://old.reddit.com/r/Futurology/comments/118ktux/microsoft_researchers_are_using_chatgpt_to/j9hohry/

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Test19s t1_j9ish6t wrote

No surprise. The T in ChatGPT stands for Transformers after all.

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skrivbords t1_j9j03zn wrote

"what can I do for you?"
"Move the drone 5 meters to the right and then 3 meters up"

"OK. Drone, listen to me, you have to activate the propeller ..."

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Tnuvu t1_j9itcse wrote

We can't even control a freakin common search engine properly without it going bazinga and skynet defensive and we're now playing with bots and drones.

The self preservation is simply bad

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m4c_4ddr3ss t1_j9k8njy wrote

Lol Microsoft is such a terrible company. Everything they produce is half baked.

0