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AI Agents: The Future of AI & Sam Altman’s Vision
Recently, OpenAI's CEO, Sam Altman, sat down with MIT Technology Review to share his exciting vision of how AI tools will seamlessly integrate into our daily lives, becoming even more integral than smartphones.
Altman envisions an AI that acts as a "super-competent colleague" that knows everything about us but doesn't feel intrusive. This AI could handle tasks instantly or work on complex ones and seek our input when needed.
The Current State of AI
Altman highlighted OpenAI's existing offerings like ChatGPT, DALL-E, and Sora, which have impressed us with their capabilities but primarily assist with isolated tasks. He sees the future where AI extends beyond chat interfaces, handling real-world tasks for us.
The Hardware Debate
When asked about new hardware, Altman mentioned that future AI might not need specialized devices, although he believes new hardware could enhance the experience. He's intrigued by AI hardware but admits it's not his area of expertise.
Challenges in Training Data
Altman acknowledged the industry's training data scarcity but remains optimistic. He believes there’s a way to train AI without needing more and more data, pointing out that humans are proof that there’s another way to develop intelligence.
The Race for AGI
OpenAI's mission is to develop artificial general intelligence (AGI) that benefits humanity. Altman expects multiple versions of AGI, each excelling in different areas. He believes a certain compute threshold is essential but is open to various outcomes.
What's Next for GPT?
When asked about GPT-5’s release, Altman simply smiled and confirmed he knew the timeline, keeping us in suspense.
Personal thought
AGI is self learning, maybe concious AI and thus equal to infinite knowledge. Let me know in the comments: how will business work in future, when AGI is at play?
In any case I would strongly advise them to look at The Akida Neuromorphic Chip, as it offers energy efficiency, real-time processing, and adaptive learning, making it a key player in the future of AI agents envisioned by Sam Altman and OpenAI.
Sam Altman says helpful agents are poised to become AI’s killer function
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The Hardware Debate
When asked about new hardware, Altman mentioned that future AI might not need specialized devices, although he believes new hardware could enhance the experience. He's intrigued by AI hardware but admits it's not his area of expertise.
I understood Altman was not into hardware when he dumped a truckload of OpenAi's cash into Rain AI's chaos theory NN, a failed system based on the confusion between chaos and complexity, or on some bizarre self-assembly hypothesis.
The fact that he has not turned his attention to hardware AI, suggests a bit of the Kodak NIH* syndrome to me, or maybe "once-bittern ... ".
* NIH = not invented here.