BRN Discussion Ongoing

Frangipani

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this isn't the case - you can search for past comments and they are there.

Hi ndefries,

whenever I click on links to deleted comments, all I get is this:

D6D789EB-AF85-4649-A4F4-1F3CCFA5DE6C.jpeg


Did you by any chance misunderstand the above comment by @sb182 or is there really a way of accessing posts after they got deleted? šŸ¤”

Cheers
Frangipani
 
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Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its bicepsšŸ’Ŗ!
I was listening to a podcast featuring Simon Thorpe ( inventor of spikenet taken over by brainchip) he was working for apple at that time to develop a billion snn model for apple.
He told in that podcast that he actually invented 1.2 million snn model which was taken over by brainchip.
Dyor
See half-way down post below, Gerrit Ecke from Mercedes ā€œlikingā€ a post about Simon Thorpe’s JAST Learning Rule, now owned by BrainChip.


 
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Frangipani

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BrainChip website update regarding the upcoming Embedded World:


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There is also a video with a number of memorable CES 2024 podcast quotes and videos of the VVDN Edge AI box:


BrainChip at Embedded World​


[Sorry, for some reason the video won’t copy… See below for the individual slides]



Explore the Akida Edge AI Box​





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Here are the quotes from the video:

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ndefries

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View attachment 60307



Hi ndefries,

whenever I click on links to deleted comments, all I get is this:

View attachment 60306

Did you by any chance misunderstand the above comment by @sb182 or is there really a way of accessing posts after they got deleted? šŸ¤”

Cheers
Frangipani
Maybe. I thought the comments were that FF deleted past posts causing the page numbers to reduce. But that wasnt the case and they are to this day searchable.
 
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You may be being deceived if you think that the AI in ChatGPT could intentionally lie. That would only be possible if it were able to be self aware šŸ¤”. All it can do is provide a response based on the context of the input, a response that can vary a bit since with the content of the internet as training material, rubbishy output is an inevitability. There would be no intent to provide a misleading or incorrect response ..just sometimes regurgitating what turns into a surprising response. AIMO.
A.I. can and does intentionally, lie, cheat, capitalise on loop holes etc.

To "it" it is not lying. It has no moral compass, it does not "know" right from wrong.

It just "chooses" the most effective and efficient path, to achieve an objective, it has been set.
In a way, it's been designed and "trained" this way.

The lying to the person, that it was blind, to get them to solve the puzzle, that Cosors mentioned, is a real example.
It "wanted" access, it couldn't "see"/solve the puzzle, so it solved the problem, by telling the person it was vision impaired..


These are the sort of things, that concern some A.I. scientists and why some consider it to be an existential threat.

When it hallucinates, or just "makes stuff up" that is not lying, it's just providing the best possible answer, with the available resources and as you said, it doesn't "know" the difference, between factual information and fictitious information, but then, many people don't either and just absorb, what they are "told" is the Truth.

You could say, that the danger in A.I. becoming increasingly "intelligent" or powerful, is that it lacks a "soul" or "humanity" but that is already severely lacking in too many humans, unfortunately..
 
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Apologies if posted already but interesting recent article here from Ant61:


"The problem with satellites is that if something goes wrong in space, you can’t do anything about it. They become space debris.

Ant61 is providing a solution. The Beacon is a first-of-its-kind product that sits somewhere between a black box and the space version of a jumper lead."

"The first Beacon was launched on February 27. Ant61 is working on 20 to be launched next year and Askavin hopes it will be ā€œhundredsā€ following that.

ā€œThe more Beacons we have in orbit, the more trust we will get from the community and it will become a de facto standard. Maybe not necessarily the Beacon but a Beacon-like device,ā€ he said.

Ant61’s goal is to create robots that will be able to repair broken satellites in space, like the space version of the NRMA, but that is several years away."
 
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cosors

šŸ‘€
You may be being deceived if you think that the AI in ChatGPT could intentionally lie. That would only be possible if it were able to be self aware šŸ¤”. All it can do is provide a response based on the context of the input, a response that can vary a bit since with the content of the internet as training material, rubbishy output is an inevitability. There would be no intent to provide a misleading or incorrect response ..just sometimes regurgitating what turns into a surprising response. AIMO.
again off topic from me, but...

There is no intent to give a misleading or incorrect response unless it is to achieve the objective.
I do not assume that there is an Ai with a consciousness at the moment, i.e. that it can consciously make a decision. But it can make decisions in order to achieve the goal.
There is another famous example where it is only about producing paper clips. The Ai manages this with extreme effectiveness and paralyses the supply chain of raw materials for -> paper clips. It only fulfilled the human's requirements and didn't even lie to achieve it's goal.
I really don't demonise anything regarding to this!
We just have to deal with it. It can't be stopped. We need to understand with or through the thousands of scientists how decisions are made by Ai to try to set conditions that are in our favour.
Asimov's laws are conclusive. He would rewrite them today I think.

I had followed another science topic regarding this. It was about the 'biggest' weakness of the GPT Ai. Interestingly, it was all about Ai's statements, which were initially 100% correct. Then humans claimed in various ways that this correct statements weren't true. The reactions are highly interesting for scientists around the world and have yet to be decoded and understood. Humans would react differently.
But perhaps this is exactly where the back door lies? As is the case with quantum computers and encryption, there are mathematical patterns they have problems with and that cannot be solved within a reasonable time. I find this interesting, the scientists had to understand it first. Quantum computers are unbeatable, except for this 'little thing' (I'm not making this up). With GPT it is maybe the confrontation with a false proclaimed lie. Maybe the debate with that atomic bomb in the movie Dark Star would have been different if the astronaut would have simply insinuated it/him a lie, who knows.
Development of generative Ai is much faster than with quantum computing I assume.
By the way, when I think of clip or video generators I think of the good old collision enquiry, I was a gamer back then, checkmate,)
We have to learn to understand what we humans have created.
I'm not yet thinking about what will happen when Ai creates Ai.

If I have understood it correctly, it is already common practice to have Ai analyse what Ai does, because sometimes it is apparently too complicated for humans.
 
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Sirod69

bavarian girl ;-)
BrainChip's University #AI Accelerator Program empowers students to shape the future of AI technology. This program equips students with cutting-edge AI technology and resources to foster innovation and drive the development of essential AI solutions. Learn how your university can join the program and empower students to shape the future of AI: https://lnkd.in/dHY3BrDX
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Frangipani

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Maybe. I thought the comments were that FF deleted past posts causing the page numbers to reduce. But that wasnt the case and they are to this day searchable.

Thank’s for your reply!
Ah, I see. That’s not how I understood his comment. The page numbers had reduced because sb182 had already started deleting his own posts (as some kind of ā€œrevengeā€ it appears). His comment in reply to @Damo4 ’s puzzled observation is confirmation of this, but the way I read it he did not imply that FF had also deleted any of his own posts.

That’s why to me your last sentence (while actually referring to FF’s posts) sounded like you were saying that sb182 wouldn’t be able to permanently delete his posts anyway, as all (supposedly) deleted posts would somehow remain accessible.
 
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Frangipani

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Luckily, I reacted almost as fast as your nom de plume of yore and followed your advice! 🤣

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Now if only I could get someone to utilise Akida for predictive deletion analysis so I can narrow down the number of screenshots I’ll have to take from now on… šŸ˜‰ I guess I’d also need a robot taking screenshots on my behalf during the GMT+1/+2 night-shift, as that is when a lot of of the action on TSE takes place… šŸ˜‚
 
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IloveLamp

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Esq.111

Fascinatingly Intuitive.
View attachment 60324
Good Morning Chippers,

Be great if our marketing department could get their shite together , or alternately our board of directors ..CEO , might like to proof such things before public release.

Brainchip university program actually has eight partners.

1, University of Oklahoma
2, Arizona State University
3, Carnegie Mellon University
4, Rochester Institute of Technology
5, Drexel University
6, University of Virginia
7, University of Western Australia
8, Cornell Tech University.

Regards,
Esq.
 
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Kachoo

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Good Morning Chippers,

Be great if our marketing department could get their shite together , or alternately our board of directors ..CEO , might like to proof such things before public release.

Brainchip university program actually has eight partners.

1, University of Oklahoma
2, Arizona State University
3, Carnegie Mellon University
4, Rochester Institute of Technology
5, Drexel University
6, University of Virginia
7, University of Western Australia
8, Cornell Tech University.

Regards,
Esq.
Possible that a few will not want to advertise as they are possibly sponsored by a competitor also?
 
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TECH

Regular
Good Morning Chippers,

Be great if our marketing department could get their shite together , or alternately our board of directors ..CEO , might like to proof such things before public release.

Brainchip university program actually has eight partners.

1, University of Oklahoma
2, Arizona State University
3, Carnegie Mellon University
4, Rochester Institute of Technology
5, Drexel University
6, University of Virginia
7, University of Western Australia
8, Cornell Tech University.

Regards,
Esq.

Good morning Esqy,

Yes, I also noticed the University of Oklahoma missing from that list, but it still appears under the partners section of the home page.

Maybe an internal error or they may have dropped out ??

Tech.
 
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stuart888

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Usage of LLMs in the workplace: Slow to Adopt or Big Blast?

(1) This Arista Networks fine fellow explains a zillion Use-Cases being implemented in this $90B rocket stock!
The screen is small, but the content is exceptional. He shows how Prompting Techniques are freaky powerful.

(2) "Demand for Inference is Deeper and Wider than we thought!"





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Frangipani

Top 20
Good Morning Chippers,

Be great if our marketing department could get their shite together , or alternately our board of directors ..CEO , might like to proof such things before public release.

Brainchip university program actually has eight partners.

1, University of Oklahoma
2, Arizona State University
3, Carnegie Mellon University
4, Rochester Institute of Technology
5, Drexel University
6, University of Virginia
7, University of Western Australia
8, Cornell Tech University.

Regards,
Esq.

Good morning Esqy,

Yes, I also noticed the University of Oklahoma missing from that list, but it still appears under the partners section of the home page.

Maybe an internal error or they may have dropped out ??

Tech.

As @TECH already said, the University of Oklahoma is still listed on the Brainchip website (https://brainchip.com/brainchip-university-ai-accelerator/).
If they had dropped out, why would they still be listed on the website?
Either way, someone didn’t pay attention - for the umptieth time! How hard can it be?!

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As for Drexel University, they don’t seem to be participating in the BrainChip University AI Accelerator Program, but rather appear to have partnered with us for some kind of research collaboration?

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stuart888

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The LLMs can generate RegEx Code! RegEx is software low language to deal with text. If you search a document for "ee", that is RegEx Code.

LLMs are putting that tedious coding in with the TypeWriter! There has to be zillions of RegEx functions out there, as it is used in so many Languages.

The LLMs are more disruptive than most think, in lots of fields.

Same Arista Networks video, just at this point. I love how he uses prompts to generate any sort of list you want. Say you want a list of stocks with a market cap of $2B up, with Gross Margin above 60% and with an Operating Profit of 40%, it will spit you out the list, which would include Arista Networks. Massive free cash flow.

Bye RegEx Books and Learning!

 
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Pmel

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stuart888

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