We’re back with another edition of Machine Learnings, brought to you by the folks at Heyday.
Heyday is an AI-powered memory assistant that resurfaces content you forgot about while you browse the web.
Just one day until Apple WWDC, and while we’re not expecting anything massive in the AI realm, we’ll certainly see a breakthrough in AR. Maybe something in the new iOS will surprise?
Either way, we use the conference as a near midpoint of the year. Historically, WWDC has brought groundbreaking announcements to the world of technology. This year, large language models + their UX have stolen the show.
For the past 6 months, we’ve been heads-down working on a new experience to raise the level of your AI tools.
If you’d like to get your hands on it, connect to Heyday for free today.
-@samdebrule
What we're reading.
1/ The OpenAI roadmap is here, and along with it, a fantastic short summary of what’s swirling around Sam Altman’s head. Learn more at Humanloop >
2/ This past week, the Center for AI Safety (CAIS) took a new approach with their statement on AI risk – brevity. Quite a few notable executives and scientists on the list, too. Learn more at Ars Technica >
3/ Can we fix ChatGPT’s hallucinations? There’s a huge open debate about this right now. This is an extremely helpful primer. Learn more at The Washington Post >
4/ We have a new champion for highest-performing open-source LLM – the Falcon 40B. Try for yourself on the Hugging Face leaderboards. Learn more at the Technology Innovation Institute >
5/ Another breakthrough has been made in mathematical reasoning with LLMs. Is “process supervision” the next method to bring us outsized results? Learn more at OpenAI >
6/ The world’s largest Turing Test has wrapped, and, inherently, you have to be curious to see who humans think they’re talking to. I was moderately surprised. Learn more at AI21 Labs >
7/ What if all the AI doomerism is a decoy? Is someone playing 4D chess or are we washing over the obvious? Learn more at The Atlantic >
Research for this edition of Machine Learnings was enhanced by Heyday, the AI-powered memory assistant.
I think "power tools" is a great term for useful machine learning software without hyped AGI issues.