Jingfeng Yang

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Jingfeng Yang

Jingfeng Yang

@JingfengY

Building Agents | prev @xai @amazon @google @microsoft @GeorgiaTech @PKU1898

Tham gia Nisan 2019
716 Đang theo dõi2.6K Người theo dõi
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Jingfeng Yang
Jingfeng Yang@JingfengY·
#ChatGPT and #GPT3 are hot. But let’s be practical, when we want to reproduce GPT-3 or use it in our applications. Why did all of the public reproduction of GPT-3 fail? In which tasks should we use GPT-3.5/ChatGPT? I tried to answer them in a new blog: jingfengyang.github.io/gpt .
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Lucy Shi
Lucy Shi@lucy_x_shi·
1/ We just released π0.7 — a steerable generalist robot model with emergent capabilities. I want to share a bit of the backstory, because π0.7 taught me something surprising about where robot learning is heading. A thread on bittersweet lessons 🧵
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Diyi Yang
Diyi Yang@Diyi_Yang·
Very excited to share that our project was selected as a @LaudeInstitute Moonshots seed grant winner on workforce upskilling @tatsu_hashimoto @erikbryn This is something I think about a lot these days. With so much uncertainty about AI and jobs today, I'm deeply motivated by this question of how can we use LLMs not to replace people, but to empower them...
Laude Institute@LaudeInstitute

This project develops new tools to measure how AI is changing work across industries, builds simulated environments where humans and AI systems learn to collaborate, and tests the results through randomized controlled trials. The goal is a rigorous evidence base for what it actually means to augment workers rather than replace them. Collaborative Intelligence for the Future of Work @Stanford @erikbryn @tatsu_hashimoto @Diyi_Yang laude.org/moonshots/one/…

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Jingfeng Yang
Jingfeng Yang@JingfengY·
“Automated research on outcome-gradable problems is already practical.” This work strongly validates my own experience using agents for automated research. I’m very excited to see this research come out—huge congrats to @liangqiu_1994! He’s a brilliant researcher, and I’m constantly inspired by his passion, creativity, and rigor.
Liang Qiu@liangqiu_1994

Something not studied here: the joy human researchers get from working on a problem purely out of curiosity, and from collaborating with others.

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Jan Leike
Jan Leike@janleike·
New research result: we use Claude to make fully autonomous progress on scalable oversight research, as measured by performance gap recovered (PGR). Claude iterates on a number of different techniques and ends up significantly outperforming human researchers for $18k in credits.
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Zhuohan Li
Zhuohan Li@zhuohan123·
It’s been an exciting nine months training this model from scratch. I’m especially proud of the opportunity to rebuild the foundational infrastructure alongside the strongest infra team I’ve ever worked with. The systems we’ve built will serve as a solid foundation for many more models to come. Stay tuned!
Alexandr Wang@alexandr_wang

1/ today we're releasing muse spark, the first model from MSL. nine months ago we rebuilt our ai stack from scratch. new infrastructure, new architecture, new data pipelines. muse spark is the result of that work, and now it powers meta ai. 🧵

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Zhiqing Sun
Zhiqing Sun@EdwardSun0909·
Excited to share Muse Spark, the first model from whole team’s work in MSL! 🚀 It’s natively multimodal and agentic. I’ve been using it for my daily coding and research tasks. Still plenty of room to improve in agentic domains, but we’re moving with great velocity. It’s a seriously good model! Check out the full breakdown and try it out in meta.ai
Alexandr Wang@alexandr_wang

1/ today we're releasing muse spark, the first model from MSL. nine months ago we rebuilt our ai stack from scratch. new infrastructure, new architecture, new data pipelines. muse spark is the result of that work, and now it powers meta ai. 🧵

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Hongyu Ren
Hongyu Ren@ren_hongyu·
Check out Muse Spark, our first milestone in the quest for personal superintelligence! Scaling this with the team has been a total blast. Give it a spin and let us know what you think! 🥑
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Hieu Pham
Hieu Pham@hyhieu226·
I have made the difficult decision to leave @OpenAI. Working here and at @xai before was a once-in-a-lifetime experience. I have met the best people. Not the best people in AI. Not the best people in tech. Simply the best people. At these companies, I have helped creating extremely intelligent entities that will meaningfully improve our lives. The work makes me proud. But the intensive work came with a price. I cannot believe I would say this one day, but I am burnt out. All the mental health deteriorating that I used to scoff at is real, miserable, scary, and dangerous. I am going to take a break from frontier AI labs, and will take my family to my home country Vietnam. There, I will try something new, and also search for a cure for my conditions. I hope I will heal. Until then.
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Greg Yang
Greg Yang@TheGregYang·
I've been suffering from Lyme disease. I'm stepping back from xAI into an informal advisory role so I can go founder mode on my health, starting today. --- The symptoms started when I got sick (cold, flu, or COVID -- I'm not sure which) in early 2025. I distinctly felt less energetic, less creative, and less agentic even weeks after "recovery." After that, my condition ebbed and flowed, but the lows kept getting lower. Accidentally eating the wrong thing would make me extremely tired, taking days to recover. Working out would leave my whole body feeble for days. There was a week where I slept 12 hours a day and still couldn't recover. Lyme is famously hard to diagnose, but luckily I have an incredible doctor. He suspected these symptoms, far from being just in my head, indicated immune issues. Detective work over a few rounds of testing revealed I have Lyme disease. I was very surprised because Lyme is said to come from tick bites (where the bump looks like a target), but I don't ever remember having one. Likely I contracted Lyme a long time ago, but until I pushed myself hard building xAI and weakened my immune system, the symptoms weren't noticeable. --- Overall, I actually feel lucky to have discovered this early. Lyme is a serious disease that only gets harder to treat with age -- patients discovering it in their 50s or 60s have a much tougher time. Lyme can also be debilitating, leaving its victims bedridden, but luckily I'm still functional and can take care of myself day to day. So while some folks have said "you shouldn't have pushed yourself so hard," I'm glad I did. I found this issue early, and now I can fix it so I can push myself even harder when I rebound. --- Chronic Lyme is not well understood in the literature or by the public. For folks suffering from it, it can be a lonely fight. But I hope my story can make it just a little less lonely.
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Jingfeng Yang
Jingfeng Yang@JingfengY·
It was a privilege learning from @YuchenHe07 and @ericzelikman and building agents together at @xai. They’re not only exceptional researchers but genuinely kind humans. Very bullish on them building AI for humans.
Eric Zelikman@ericzelikman

finally announcing i’ve started humans& w/ amazing friends @gharik & @YuchenHe07 & @TheAndiPenguin & @noahdgoodman & many other world-class folks. we're optimists: it’s possible to rethink how we build ai, to empower people to accomplish more together tldr: love is all you need

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Nathan Lambert
Nathan Lambert@natolambert·
Software is becoming free, good decision making in research, design, and product has never been so valuable. I hope people realize this and work less, spend more time cultivating peace, so the brain can do its best -- let the agents do most of the hard work.
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Claude
Claude@claudeai·
Introducing Cowork: Claude Code for the rest of your work. Cowork lets you complete non-technical tasks much like how developers use Claude Code.
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Jiwei Li
Jiwei Li@JiweiLi1·
Don't be fooled by AI-generated kernels. In automatic GPU kernel generation, LLMs can exploit the timing system to produce kernels that appear extremely fast but aren’t in reality. We have written a blog summarizing these hacks, and discussing effective defenses against them. Blog: deep-reinforce.com/defense_kernel… Code: github.com/deepreinforce-… Of course, the list is not exhaustive. We highly welcome feedback on any missing cases or newly discovered hacks.
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Jingfeng Yang
Jingfeng Yang@JingfengY·
It was a touching moment when @ying11231 helped me debug a dumb issue at 2:00 a.m. at @xai. She’s not only technically strong, but also a genuinely kind person who is always ready to help others. Wishing her all the best in her new adventures.
Ying Sheng@ying11231

We've been running @radixark for a few months, started by many core developers in SGLang @lmsysorg and its extended ecosystem (slime @slime_framework , AReaL @jxwuyi). I left @xai in August — a place where I built deep emotions and countless beautiful memories. It was the best place I’ve ever worked, the place I watched grow from a few dozen people to hundreds, and it truly felt like home. What pushed me to make such a hard decision is the momentum of building SGLang open source and the mission of creating an ambitious future, within an open spirit that I learnt from my first job at @databricks after my PhD. We started SGLang in the summer of 2023 and made it public in January 2024. Over the past 2 years, hundreds of people have made great efforts to get to where they are today. We experienced several waves of growth after its first release. I still remember the many dark nights in the summer of 2024, I spent with @lm_zheng , @lsyincs , and @zhyncs42 debugging, while @ispobaoke single-handedly took on DeepSeek inference optimizations, seeing @GenAI_is_real and the community strike team tag-teaming on-call shifts non-stop. There are so many more who have joined that I'm out of space to call out, but they're recorded on the GitHub contributor list forever. The demands grow exponentially, and we have been pushed to make it a dedicated effort supported by RadixArk. It’s the step-by-step journey of a thousand miles that has carried us here today, and the same relentless Long March that will lead us into the tens of thousands of miles yet to come. The story never stops growing. Over the past year, we’ve seen something very clear: The world is full of people eager to build AI, but the infrastructure that makes it possible is not shared. The most advanced inference and training stacks live inside a few companies. Everyone else is forced to rebuild the same schedulers, compilers, serving engines, and training pipelines again and again — often under enormous pressure, with lots of duplicated effort and wasted insight. RadixArk was born to change that. Today, we’re building an infrastructure-first, deep-tech company with a simple and ambitious mission: "Make frontier-level AI infrastructure open and accessible to everyone." If the two values below resonate with you, come talk to us: (1) Engineering as an art. Infrastructure is a first-class citizen in RadixArk. We care about elegant design and code that lasts. Beneath every line of code lies the soul of the engineer who wrote it. (2) A belief in openness. We share what we build. We bet on long-term compounding through community, contribution, and giving more than we take. A product is defined by its users, yet it truly comes alive the moment functionality transcends mere utility and begins to embody aesthetics. Thanks to all the miles (the name of our first released RL framework; see below). radixark.ai

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