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twochillinyesterday at 5:21 PM3 repliesview on HN

They're not objectively amazing. Friction is not inherently a bad thing when we have models telling humans that their ideas are flawless (unless asked to point out flaws). Great that it made you smile, but there's quite a few arguments that paint your optimism as dangerously naive.


Replies

colinplamondonyesterday at 5:29 PM

- A queryable semantic network of all human thought, navigable in pure language, capable of inhabiting any persona constructible from in-distribution concepts, generating high quality output across a breadth of domains.

- An ability to curve back into the past and analyze historical events from any perspective, and summon the sources that would be used to back that point of view up.

- A simulator for others, providing a rubber duck inhabit another person's point of view, allowing one to patiently poke at where you might be in the wrong.

- Deep research to aggregate thousands of websites into a highly structured output, with runtime filtering, providing a personalized search engine for any topic, at any time, with 30 seconds of speech.

- Amplification of intent, making it possible to send your thoughts and goals "forward" along many different vectors, seeing which bear fruit.

- Exploration of 4-5 variant designs for any concept, allowing rapid exploration of any design space, with style transfer for high-trust examples.

- Enablement of product craft in design, animation, and micro-interactions that were eliminated as tech boomed in the 2010's as "unprofitable".

It's a possibility space of pure potential, the scale of which is limited only by one's own wonder, industriousness, and curiosity.

People can use it badly - and engagement-aligned models like 4o are cognitive heroin - but the invention of LLMs is an absolute wonder.

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jacobr1yesterday at 5:40 PM

Is anything objectively amazing? Seems like an inherently subjective quality to evaluate.

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DANmodeyesterday at 7:08 PM

Do any of the arguments stay within the bounds of this Show HN?

or is it theoretical stuff about other occasions?