Do you think there is a possibility of using sewage water to cool AI servers? submitted by /u/TippaMyClit [link] [Kommentare]
https://reddit.com/link/1ty3xhz/video/dzede49lhk5h1/player Link to the replay. What are everyone’s thoughts on this? I know the benchmark has gotten a lot of criticism for being “too difficult” from a scoring perspective, but after watching the replay, it honestly looks like the models just aren’t that close to solving it yet. I’m not saying the benchmark is perfect, but the failures don’t really look like minor scoring issues. They look more like the model still doesn’t understand the task well enough to complete it reliably. submitted by /u/ClickedMoss5 [link] [Kommentare]
So I am trying to figure out what agent OS is. I am a layman and a lot of times when I see the information it comes off as very technical. However, I do like the idea of a dashboard because for my neurodivergent brain, it would be nice to have all of the AI tools in one space. Can you all help me understand what agent OS is? submitted by /u/EducatedBrotha [link] [Kommentare]
I've been building a content production tool for my company, which uses AI for things like structure and automatically inserting links with defined anchor text. 2 days ago, I started testing the results in AI text detection scanners and kept getting inconsistent results, even when I knew my articles looked more natural than a previous test. Revision after revision of code, 10 hours spent trying to get it right. And then I decided to pop in a few articles I had personally written, where I knew AI was not involved. Not a single one of the major scanners got it correct. Most of them flagged my original content as having more AI text than the articles my tool was producing. Now that I've gone down this rabbit hole and understand how AI writes and how the detectors work, I'm not sure that any tool is ever going to be able to do this correctly. For obviously written AI articles, sure, it will catch those. But for original content, I just don't see how it's ever going to work. What is everyone's thoughts on this? Has anyone done the same experiment? submitted by /u/Sypheix [link] [Kommentare]
I don’t know if this is the right sub-reddit to ask this type of question. I am quite ignorant about hardcore technical stuff. I want to say that I love the idea of an agnostic approach to AI and being able to understand and decide which model is best suited for a specific task. As well as the ability to have citations, being able to have it look through health research and stuff for queries regarding health, etc. Now I do not know if this is just in a general sense people just complaining or something else entirely, but I am seeing a lot of negative stuff on the Perplexity sub-reddit. In terms of like how the quality has gone down, asking how such a company is still even in business. I was just wondering if any of this holds any water or is overly exaggerated submitted by /u/No-Main6695 [link] [Kommentare]
Hi! I’ve been working in IT for over seven years now, and my office is next to some healthcare professionals. During a lunch break sitting on a bench in the sun, one of them asked me: If I enter my patients’ personal information into ChatGPT, is that a problem? I wasn’t sure how to answer him, in my opinion, yes, but what do you think? I’d be curious to hear your thoughts, and if there are any studies on the subject, I’d love to see them too! Thanks in advance for your responses! Have a great day, everyone ☀️ Alex submitted by /u/No_Computer_1247 [link] [Kommentare]
Unpopular opinion: most AI tools don’t actually save time. They just move the work around. You still have to prompt it, check it, edit it, and sometimes redo it. That’s not automation — that’s just a different kind of work. The only ones I’ve seen genuinely cut time are search tools like Perplexity and coding tools like Cursor. Everything else feels like it’s optimized for the demo, not real use. Change my mind submitted by /u/aiprotivity_ [link] [Kommentare]
As the title says, just curious if there are devices that two people speaning different languages can wear and talk in real time without needing any human interpreter? submitted by /u/fearofunknown1 [link] [Kommentare]
One of the clearest breakdowns for average people like me to understand how AI actually works, and some interesting further information to'boot. https://rogerthatcleansignal.carrd.co/ Discuss. submitted by /u/Leading_Pollution131 [link] [Kommentare]
eh, too late brah.. submitted by /u/TrisolaranPrinceps- [link] [Kommentare]