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@optimistbloop

intelligence per token

Tham gia Ekim 2019
1.1K Đang theo dõi75 Người theo dõi
bloop
bloop@optimistbloop·
@btibor91 “OpenAI renamed its product org to "AGI Deployment", and Sam noted things are moving faster than many expected” What’s this in reference to? Does this mean Spud is an unexpected leap forward?
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Tibor Blaho
Tibor Blaho@btibor91·
Sam Altman gave up direct control of OpenAI's safety and security teams, moving safety under CRO Mark Chen and security under president Greg Brockman, so he can focus on raising money, supply chains and building data centers at a massive scale OpenAI finished pretraining its next big model called "Spud" and expects a very strong model in a few weeks that can accelerate the economy, and is shutting down the Sora video app and API to free up computing power for it and shelved plans to bring video features into ChatGPT Sora research will shift to long-term world simulation focused on robotics, OpenAI renamed its product org to "AGI Deployment", and Sam noted things are moving faster than many expected
Stephanie Palazzolo@steph_palazzolo

Breaking: OpenAI is canning Sora (mobile app, API and video capabilities in ChatGPT). It’s finished training its latest model, codenamed Spud, as CEO Sam Altman shifts his reports. w/ @amir theinformation.com/articles/opena…

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bloop
bloop@optimistbloop·
@LizzieTao @NotebookLM Is there any way, whatsoever, to have ppt slow decks editable? So I can take the output and edit the text, shapes, infographics, etc
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lizard
lizard@LizzieTao·
Ok!!! Attempting to build my SECOND @NotebookLM feature (with profuse and generous agentic help). All that is to say... please continue to shout your feature requests from the roof tops! I promise at least someone is listening and working to make them a reality!
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bloop
bloop@optimistbloop·
@OfficialLoganK The biggest bottleneck I currently see is the App Store. I vibe code apps all the time, but no way to have them appear as distinct apps on my phone. It would change the game entirely
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Logan Kilpatrick
Logan Kilpatrick@OfficialLoganK·
With AI coding, it’s possible every app / website becomes an App Store. The second and third order effects of this are interesting to think about.
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Chris
Chris@chatgpt21·
Deleted from Logan 👀 Did Deepmind crack continous learning?
Chris tweet media
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bloop
bloop@optimistbloop·
@deredleritt3r @_NathanCalvin Well articulated. I experience the same with my work in consulting. It almost seems archaic compared to workflows in codex and claude code, and can’t help but be excited for the moment my work is transformed the same way
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prinz
prinz@deredleritt3r·
The way I use AI today reminds me of how people used Sonnet 3.5 for coding in 2024. I prompt the LLM, it generates useful output, I incorporate that output into my work product. The next step is "Claude Code for lawyers", which I assume we'll be seeing before too long. For now, I am definitely more productive and definitely not (yet) unnerved. Very curious to see how long it will take AI to proliferate through the profession.
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Nathan Calvin
Nathan Calvin@_NathanCalvin·
“That first draft was by no means file ready, but it was better than what I would’ve received from the vast majority of BigLaw associates.” I expect lawyers to feel next year how programmers feel this year. (More productive but also increasingly unnerved)
Orin Kerr@OrinKerr

An attorney writes to me about the mostly AI-written law review article he had accepted this spring, now forthcoming in the flagship law review of a Top 50 law school. A draft of the article is now up on SSRN. According to the attorney: " Last month I used Claude to assist in drafting a new article . . . . I drafted this article in about 15 hours. In 2022 I published an article of similar length that took around 150 hours." The attorney adds: "I used Claude the way I’d use a junior associate—as a first drafter, sounding board, and research assistant. Most of the article, including the entirety of the title, abstract, and intro, is mine from the keyboard up. And anything Claude contributed that made it to the final version is there because I reviewed it, agreed with it, and chose to sign my name to it. This is no different than how I’d review an associate’s draft and then take responsibility for the finished product." The attorney adds: "That first draft was by no means file ready, but it was better than what I would’ve received from the vast majority of BigLaw associates. I was blown away, and have since started my own appellate and litigation practice in an effort to replicate these productivity gains for client work." Your thoughts? I know the attorney's name, and the journal, and I have checked out the article, but I figured that, at least for now, I would hold that back.

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bloop
bloop@optimistbloop·
@TheRealAdamG @jason_haugh @mcuban Adam anything you can share about the planned hire increase to help orgs with AI adoption? Are they all FDE’s? Super interested to learn more, it’s a mirror of what I currently do but more from a business process and use case design perspective
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Adam.GPT
Adam.GPT@TheRealAdamG·
It feels like we are top of the 3rd inning. The models aren’t the problem, they’re smart enough now. Now it’s about applying them at scale. AI-enabling a process or workflow (like we’ve been doing) is one thing. But reimagining and repaving that process or workflow as AI-native is where transformational change will begin to occur — at scale. It goes slow until it goes really fast. I think that’ll be the story of 2026.
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Jason Haugh
Jason Haugh@jason_haugh·
I run 8 AI agents every day and I still think adoption is the hardest problem in this space. OpenAI apparently agrees, they’re doubling their workforce and one of the roles they’re specifically hiring for is helping businesses actually implement their tools. A $840B company that still needs dedicated people to get customers to use the product says a lot about where we really are.
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bloop
bloop@optimistbloop·
@gabriel1 and we haven’t even seen knowledge work agents take hold yet.. that’s when the world will really start to notice at least in my sphere, people are blind to what’s happening in code, and have no idea what’s coming for their own work
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gabriel
gabriel@gabriel1·
ai inference will go crazy this year anyone who has tried computer agents enough to understand why it's useful knows this
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bloop
bloop@optimistbloop·
@emollick What kind of UX do you imagine for the future of AI?
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Ethan Mollick
Ethan Mollick@emollick·
There is some danger for the Big Three labs that they have run out of imagination and are now refining Codex/Claude Code/Antigravity, and building their next tools (Cowork, etc) to be similar. These were good UX for AI's use & limits today, but not great UX for the future of AI.
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bloop
bloop@optimistbloop·
@thsottiaux @ajambrosino Any insights about the paradigm post agents? It’s clear agents will evolve from coding to knowledge work, but seems like the agentic framework will stay for a while. Even AGI / ASI are fundamentally intelligent agents. Thoughts?
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Tibo
Tibo@thsottiaux·
Codex will take us places
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bloop
bloop@optimistbloop·
@gabriel1 + the recent update to voice is super fast. Can’t wait for this to advance even further.. very underrated
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gabriel
gabriel@gabriel1·
there was no listener to speech before, no one likes audio messages or verbose transcriptions but ai doesn't care. i can go on a 30minute walk and yap constantly and ramble incoherently, dump it into codex for 1h and it one shots any feature
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gabriel
gabriel@gabriel1·
me and everyone around me prompt codex and chatgpt with voice. the more decisions you can spit out to codex the better your code will be, so you're only interface limited the "everyone will use speech" guys were right, just 234 products and 18344 softwares too early
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bloop
bloop@optimistbloop·
@chatgpt21 Finally. Knowledge work agents still haven’t properly hit yet, hoping we see something amazing this year
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Chris
Chris@chatgpt21·
One of the exciting things coming from OpenAI that I was referring to is not just the combination of Codex and ChatGPT. There will also be more white collar aspects to come, e.g., business skills and a bit more.
Chris tweet media
Chris@chatgpt21

There are so many exciting things happening at OpenAI I wish I could talk about, but what I’ll say is that outside of coding and chatting they’re cooking good. Something that I’ve been looking forward to specifically for my work And I’m not referring to a voice model.

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Justin
Justin@JustinBleuel·
feeling unhobbled
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roon
roon@tszzl·
@rhydhimma they are far more significant than alphafold and it’s not close imo
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Rhydhimma (sci/acc)
Rhydhimma (sci/acc)@rhydhimma·
Codex and Claude Code are probably the most revolutionary products of this century. For now. Maybe not as significant as Alphafold, and all the PhD who slogged to get protein structure data. Data is the keyword.
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