I don't think they're intentionally throttling any of it. You've got known knowns, known unknowns, and unknown unknowns. Then, you gave different goals. They keep hitting new unknown unknowns, as they advance.
The military guys need to prevent hallucinating, and that's hard. It's known unknown in general, but the devils in the details are unknown unknowns, and they playing whackamole with them. They want the learning capability, but want to stay in control of the controls. A lot of the MIL AI work is using AI on top of already proven deterministic software and hardware, too, and with narrow development focii. The same software isn't being used to waste 100Wh giving you a crab boil recipe, then turning around and using that for summarizing SEA metal markets.
FI, flying in the air should actually be easier than driving busy streets, by orders of magnitude. They had pre-AI tech that do that pretty well. The same is likely going on in big pharma, gluing AI, as a way to dump data in, and filter results, 10000x faster than before, with their old software designs at the core. It not that military AI, or any other software based technology, is way ahead of the private sector. It's that they're not trying to do the general cases LLMs and the like are, but have more targeted goals. It's not way ahead, so much as it is designed for a task, where what we get is tech companies throwing more spaghetti at more walls, with bigger spoons. I would daresay it's likely more dangerous than most of what the military is doing, though, as it's threatening to tear apart the few trusted communication channels we have left, after COVID showed us how bad the old ones were.
The tech bro side of things can accept some breaking of things, and hallucinating, if the overall results improve. They are working with technology they can't even understand, open source or not, now. As long as it looks to be able to depress wages better, or get closer to destroying the fact vs fiction distinction in video and audio content, they go full steam ahead. Even there, like most tech, they show demos that are carefully crafted, to make investors think the product is better than it really is.
Meh I feel like they are hiding things behind closed doors, what we see now is just a taste of what they are already capable of, thats the feeling I have.
For example, looking up about my ancestor again recently and thought it was interesting the AI has some opinions about him, and it has the same access to the same resources I do.
Asking for example chatgpt about daniels brother who was fined for loaning guns to the native americans it has this to say.
In short, Stephen Wing’s fine likely reflects a clash of cultural and religious values between the Quakers and the colonial authorities, particularly around issues of gun control, security, and colonial authority. While Wing's intent may have been peaceful or even protective, the Puritan leadership saw the act as a threat to their authority and the fragile relationship between the colonists and Native populations.
I have very little doubt there is a database with everyones profiles built from decades of scouring the internet and other resources.
Grindall Wing was a descendant of Daniel Wing, who had been an early Quaker convert and a prominent member of the Quaker community in Sandwich, Massachusetts, during the mid-1600s. As you've seen from earlier parts of the Wing family history, Daniel Wing had been involved in resisting oppressive laws against Quakers in the colony. Grindall, as a descendant, would have been influenced by the Quaker beliefs of his forebears—values like peace, equality, and nonviolence.
Grindall's father was Henry Wing, and his grandfather (Daniel’s son) was a notable figure in the local Quaker community. Like other Quaker families, the Wing family maintained a strong commitment to religious freedom and pacifism, which shaped their social, political, and economic activities.
I get awfully curious what the system thinks about me sometimes.
400 years later, those values are still going strong, so calling me racist always gives me a laugh. But ill be damned, and maybe its the low ass phosphorous talking.
I got to still wonder if getting poisoned and denied medical help was intentional. You can see I come from a long line of pain in the ass people.
The Wing family was part of the early New England settler community, and their involvement in Quakerism was especially significant because Quakers often faced persecution in the colonies due to their religious beliefs. The family’s commitment to pacifism, equality, and religious freedom was central to their identity and influenced their contributions to society.
Frederick Douglass’s eulogy at Asa Wing’s funeral is a notable moment in the intersection of Quakerism, abolitionism, and African American history. Asa Wing was a well-respected Quaker who was deeply committed to the cause of abolition and equality, and his funeral became an occasion for reflection on his life’s work. The fact that Frederick Douglass, one of the most prominent figures in the abolitionist movement, delivered the eulogy speaks volumes about the connection between the Quaker community and the abolitionist movement, as well as Douglass’s personal admiration for the values Asa Wing represented.
It feels slowly because of this... https://img.gvid.tv/i/5oWMRbSa.jpg That jew failed with the early VR push, and the whole agenda had to be slowed down. Imagine artificial intelligence being introduced within a virtual reality...yet, the goyim didn't bite, and so now VR tries to catch up, while AI is being held down.
I don't think they're intentionally throttling any of it. You've got known knowns, known unknowns, and unknown unknowns. Then, you gave different goals. They keep hitting new unknown unknowns, as they advance.
The military guys need to prevent hallucinating, and that's hard. It's known unknown in general, but the devils in the details are unknown unknowns, and they playing whackamole with them. They want the learning capability, but want to stay in control of the controls. A lot of the MIL AI work is using AI on top of already proven deterministic software and hardware, too, and with narrow development focii. The same software isn't being used to waste 100Wh giving you a crab boil recipe, then turning around and using that for summarizing SEA metal markets.
FI, flying in the air should actually be easier than driving busy streets, by orders of magnitude. They had pre-AI tech that do that pretty well. The same is likely going on in big pharma, gluing AI, as a way to dump data in, and filter results, 10000x faster than before, with their old software designs at the core. It not that military AI, or any other software based technology, is way ahead of the private sector. It's that they're not trying to do the general cases LLMs and the like are, but have more targeted goals. It's not way ahead, so much as it is designed for a task, where what we get is tech companies throwing more spaghetti at more walls, with bigger spoons. I would daresay it's likely more dangerous than most of what the military is doing, though, as it's threatening to tear apart the few trusted communication channels we have left, after COVID showed us how bad the old ones were.
The tech bro side of things can accept some breaking of things, and hallucinating, if the overall results improve. They are working with technology they can't even understand, open source or not, now. As long as it looks to be able to depress wages better, or get closer to destroying the fact vs fiction distinction in video and audio content, they go full steam ahead. Even there, like most tech, they show demos that are carefully crafted, to make investors think the product is better than it really is.
Meh I feel like they are hiding things behind closed doors, what we see now is just a taste of what they are already capable of, thats the feeling I have.
For example, looking up about my ancestor again recently and thought it was interesting the AI has some opinions about him, and it has the same access to the same resources I do.
Asking for example chatgpt about daniels brother who was fined for loaning guns to the native americans it has this to say.
I have very little doubt there is a database with everyones profiles built from decades of scouring the internet and other resources.
I get awfully curious what the system thinks about me sometimes.
400 years later, those values are still going strong, so calling me racist always gives me a laugh. But ill be damned, and maybe its the low ass phosphorous talking.
I got to still wonder if getting poisoned and denied medical help was intentional. You can see I come from a long line of pain in the ass people.
So according to AI, your family armed prairie niggers and let feral niggers on the loose? Who needs jews to undermine us when we have the Wings
It feels slowly because of this... https://img.gvid.tv/i/5oWMRbSa.jpg That jew failed with the early VR push, and the whole agenda had to be slowed down. Imagine artificial intelligence being introduced within a virtual reality...yet, the goyim didn't bite, and so now VR tries to catch up, while AI is being held down.
no they aren't
it has plateued for now is all