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Human or AI? (Page 1/1) |
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TheDigitalAlchemist
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JAN 20, 01:08 PM
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Last few months, I'm noticing this more and more - it's becoming increasingly difficult to know if you are interacting with a person or AI. Chats, phone calls, other than the meetings where "everyone is physically in the same room". The "live" voice changers are becoming increasingly difficult to detect. The "live" video filters as well. Cameras are able to zoom and pan SO much more smoothly, plug-and-play milti-cams setups make even the most 'minor' meetings seem like edited TV productions. It's all pretty cool and kinda crazy at the same time.
So many things are becoming automated, and when things don't go well, humans are left pushing buttons or flipping switches. Had a few Mass transit situations the past few days and its been a tiny unpleasent taste of
"Major Progress" experienced on a daily has always felt like this, but it wasn't as accelerated... (I know progress is constant, but not consistent) the shift from horses to cars, from having no electricity to having whole cities electrified, etc.). Going from no phones to being able to talk to anyone anywhere on the planet was definetley a game-changer, but this AI stuff...
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williegoat
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JAN 20, 01:34 PM
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Slowly, generation by generation, things like this alter the human psyche. I have often pondered the profound effect that the proliferation of recorded media had on our collective concept of reality at the turn of the twentieth century.
I know what it did to music. It changed everything.
Suddenly people could review scenes and sounds that occurred in the past. It had to be an amazing thing to see a photograph, a movie or listen to a recording, to see something that happened in the past in another part of the world. Up until then, the entirety of human existence was fleeting, as soon as it happened, it was gone forever.
Now, we take it for granted. So much so that nobody participates. Everyone is recording the present, to experience it later. If you missed it, just Google it. It is on YouTube.
How much did these people pay for tickets, just to watch the show on their phones?[This message has been edited by williegoat (edited 01-20-2023).]
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Jake_Dragon
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JAN 20, 02:07 PM
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Every chat I have been in for the last couple of years has started out with AI.
Some of them are a little creepy as they do not translate into other languages very well.
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Wichita
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JAN 20, 02:35 PM
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[This message has been edited by Wichita (edited 01-20-2023).]
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TheDigitalAlchemist
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JAN 20, 02:37 PM
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quote | Originally posted by williegoat:
Everyone is recording the present, to experience it later. If you missed it, just Google it. It is on YouTube.
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There was a thing once that showed you didn't have to take a pic at a place - because SO MANY people took pics there, they had every possible angle. you could move a little dude, and turn them, and the pic was there. (Sorta like GoogleMap but more content)
folks have worked on robot locomotion using different approaches - I thought a neat one was one that continually figures out like 15,000 places to place the next appendage, and then (sometimes) a crazy amount of the possible following steps after that. Silent machines continuously rendering infinite possibilities and outcomes. Slap on a pair of AR goggles and visualize it, would be kinda like one of them thar Hindu gods.
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TheDigitalAlchemist
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JAN 20, 02:38 PM
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quote | Originally posted by Jake_Dragon:
Every chat I have been in for the last couple of years has started out with AI.
Some of them are a little creepy as they do not translate into other languages very well. |
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random thing - Some of those chats (live and AI) can see your input as you type it - had a person answer me before I hit "enter" more than once.
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TheDigitalAlchemist
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JAN 20, 02:45 PM
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In the next five years, it is likely that AI will begin to reduce employment for college-educated workers. As the technology continues to advance, it will be able to perform tasks that were previously thought to require a high level of education and skill. This could lead to a displacement of workers in certain industries, as companies look to cut costs by automating processes. While it is difficult to predict the exact extent of this trend, it is clear that AI will have a significant impact on the job market for college-educated workers. It will be important for individuals to stay up to date on the latest developments in AI and to consider how their skills and expertise can be leveraged in a world where machines are increasingly able to perform many tasks.
https://www.theatlantic.com...omation-jobs/672767/
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Valkrie9
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JAN 20, 03:50 PM
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D, del [This message has been edited by Valkrie9 (edited 01-20-2023).]
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Valkrie9
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JAN 20, 04:18 PM
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