Are you tired of grabbing lunch at the drive-thru and not having your order right? America's fast food chains are now turning to a high-tech solution: artifi...
The kicker:
The system isn’t purely run on AI. It also relies on human input to help it learn and become more accurate.
There was a stretch of the mid-late 20th century where advertisers would describe things as “space aged” that had nothing to do with space travel technology.
There is a disconnect between what computer scientists understands as AI and what the general public understands as AI. This was previously not a problem, nerds give confusing names to stuff all the time, but it became a problem after this latest hype cycle where incurious laypeople are in charge of the messaging (or in a less charitable interpretation, benefit from fear of the singularity™). Doesn't help that scientific communication is dogshit.
the human input they're talking about is called labelling. it means humans have to listen to the audio theyve collected and manually transcribe it to train the voice recongition system.
I don’t recall it being called “AI” until it became the big new thing to slap onto your product to pump up your company’s value before you run away with the money after the inevitable collapse because you’re trying to invent something that already exists.
The phrase “AI” started out meaning a computer that was actually sentient, and the requirements have become more and more loosened and lax that machine learning now counts as “AI”.
The phrase “AI” started out meaning a computer that was actually sentient, and the requirements have become more and more loosened and lax that machine learning now counts as “AI”.
It's so annoying. You get headlines like "AI discovers faster matrix multiplication algorithm". Just from the headline, you'd assume researchers spoke to the fucking HAL 9000 and it taught them how to multiply matrices better. When in reality they just trained a neural network
The phrase “AI” started out meaning a computer that was actually sentient
When did anybody use it that way?
It's literally impossible to determine for a fact that something or somebody (outside of oneself) is sentient, and our best guess for something being sentient has a requirement for having a nervous system, which artificial computers at least usually do not have, and I'm pretty sure that it did not start getting used in the context of artificial biological computers in mind.
I don't think anybody ever used the word 'AI' that way.
Pretty sure that 'AI' was never an actual term. Just a way to refer to sufficiently capable computers (with standards depending heavily on context, but I'm pretty sure usually including the ability to learn in some way).
I'm not sure if you think that I was talking about you not knowing what it means, so I'd like to note that I'm quoting the thing that is said in the video, and the quote was even provided by you yourself.
In general, though, I don't think that calling ANN/ML stuff 'AI' is unfair, given that it was never an actual term, and considering that it seems to align with how the expression 'AI' has always been used.
lmao the company running this, Hi Auto, is also an israeli firm
from what i can tell they hook into google voice's api and then hook the output into an llm to respond. the order is put into their system through RAG. this is like, script kiddie shit but they have a company of 50 people doing it (with 12 actual programmers). they also advertise 90% accuracy of the order which is fucking abysmal, any legit data scientist would be ashamed of such a low rate. it should be noted that accuracy is usually measured per token, so imagine it getting 10% of your syllables wrong in your order, which can end up with an order that is very wrong and could trigger the wrong RAG (ordering something you dont want). some of this is likely due to issues with audio quality from shit ass drive thru mics, loud motors, and bad noise cancelling. you can get a much higher accuracy spooling up a random local speech+llm model at home while picking your nose
I hate the bastardization of terminology that, up to here, has had very specific connotations. Don’t talk to me about AI unless you’re talking about some HAL 9000/Durandal “actually sentient” shit
Except for Compile, in reference to Zanac’s use of “A.I.” (in the context of the game’s dynamic difficulty mechanism), partially because that ties into the game’s backstory, and partially because Zanac whips