dipan pal (@dipankpal) 's Twitter Profile
dipan pal

@dipankpal

Founder @ Voaige Inc.

ID: 44321267

linkhttps://www.voaige.com/ calendar_today03-06-2009 08:31:09

47 Tweet

60 Takipçi

181 Takip Edilen

dipan pal (@dipankpal) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Alignment research will be important across other verticals as well. Here we hear from open AI's team. aligned.substack.com/p/alignment-op…

Cooper (@peakcooper) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#GPT4 saved my dog's life. After my dog got diagnosed with a tick-borne disease, the vet started her on the proper treatment, and despite a serious anemia, her condition seemed to be improving relatively well. After a few days however, things took a turn for the worse 1/

Aravind Srinivas (@aravsrinivas) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The only solution to world peace is abundance of energy and intelligence. Nothing else matters. Without abundance, zero sum games prevail.

Richard Sutton (@richardssutton) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I've studied intelligence all my long life, yet still I feel I learned important things about intelligence by reading this book. Thank you, Max Bennett.

I've studied intelligence all my long life, yet still I feel I learned important things about intelligence by reading this book.
Thank you, Max Bennett.
martin_casado (@martin_casado) 's Twitter Profile Photo

India is home to much of the best talent the human race has to offer. It's contributions to CS rival that of any other country. And its future potential is better than most. It'd be a crime if it regulated itself out of this leadership. India would loose. We'd all loose.

dipan pal (@dipankpal) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This is exactly why LLMs will find it difficult to achieve superhuman general intelligence. We need a bottoms up approach to learning to reason and not a top down one.

Andrej Karpathy (@karpathy) 's Twitter Profile Photo

# automating software engineering In my mind, automating software engineering will look similar to automating driving. E.g. in self-driving the progression of increasing autonomy and higher abstraction looks something like: 1. first the human performs all driving actions

Brett Adcock (@adcock_brett) 's Twitter Profile Photo

AI and Robotics is moving fast. So, I share the most important research every week. Here's everything you need to know and how to make sense out of it:

murat 🍥 (@mayfer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

vitamin b12 is so weird - all life depends on it - only bacteria can make it - it has cobalt in it all DNA and nerves would be fubared without trace amounts of cobalt in soil

vitamin b12 is so weird
- all life depends on it
- only bacteria can make it
- it has cobalt in it

all DNA and nerves would be fubared without trace amounts of cobalt in soil
Ayzaan Wahid (@ayzwah) 's Twitter Profile Photo

For the past year we've been working on ALOHA Unleashed 🌋 @GoogleDeepmind - pushing the scale and dexterity of tasks on our ALOHA 2 fleet. Here is a thread with some of the coolest videos! The first task is hanging a shirt on a hanger (autonomous 1x)

Andrej Karpathy (@karpathy) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The history of computing is repeating in an echo, except replace computers that do precise arithmetic on bytes with computers that do statistical arithmetic on tokens.

Yann LeCun (@ylecun) 's Twitter Profile Photo

As long as AI systems are trained to reproduce human-generated data (e.g. text) and have no search/planning/reasoning capability, performance will saturate below or around human level. Furthermore, the amount of trials needed to reach that level will be far larger than the

Tim Duignan (@timothyduignan) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This is the most surprising and exciting result of my career: we were running simulations of NaCl with a neural network potential that implicitly accounts for the effect of the water, ie a continuum solvent model (trained on normal MD) when Junji noticed something strange: 1/n

Aidan Clark (@_aidan_clark_) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Only folks that started large scale DL work after ~GPT-2 think architecture doesn’t matter, the rest saw how much arch work had to happen to get here.