• RxBrad@infosec.pub
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    2 days ago

    Okay, cool…

    So, how much longer before Nvidia stops slapping a “$500-600 RTX XX70” label on a $300 RTX XX60 product with each new generation?

    The thinly-veiled 75-100% price increases aren’t fun for those of us not constantly-touching-themselves over AI.

  • wookiepedia@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    This has nothing to do with DeepSeek. The world has run out of flashy leather jackets for Jensen to wear, so nvidia is toast.

  • drascus@sh.itjust.works
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    3 days ago

    Okay seriously this technology still baffles me. Like its cool but why invest so much in an unknown like AIs future ? We could invest in people and education and end up with really smart people. For the cost of an education we could end up with smart people who contribute to the economy and society. Instead we are dumping billions into this shit.

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      Because rulling class got high on the promise that they could finally eliminate workers as a cost and be independent from us.

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        They don’t want to get rid of workers because then there would be no consumers. No, they want to increase the downward pressure on wages so they can vacuum up further savings.

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          Why? If you automatize away (regardless of whether it’s feasible or not) all the workers, what’s stop them for cutting them out of the equation? Why can’t they just trade assets between themselves, maintaining a small slave population that does machine maintenance for food and shelter and screwing the rest? Why do you think they still need us if they own both the means for the production as well as labor to produce? That would be a post-labour scarcity economy, available only for the wealthy and with the rest of us left to rot. If you have assets like land, materials, factories you can participate, if you don’t, you can’t

          While I don’t think that this is feasible technologically yet by any means, I think this is what the rich are huffing currently. They want to be independent from us because they are threatened by us.

        • nomy@lemmy.zip
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          They want you to owe your soul to the company store, to live hand-to-mouth by their largess.

    • vga@sopuli.xyz
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      3 days ago

      For the cost of an education we could end up with smart people who contribute to the economy and society. Instead we are dumping billions into this shit.

      Those are different "we"s.

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      Tech/Wall St constantly needs something to hype in order to bring in “investor” money. The “new technology-> product development -> product -> IPO” pipeline is now “straight to pump-and-dump” (for example, see Crypto currency).

      The excitement of the previous hype train (self-driving cars) is no longer bringing in starry-eyed “investors” willing to quickly part ways with OPM. “AI” made a big splash and Tech/Wall St is going to milk it for all they can lest they fall into the same bad economy as that one company that didn’t jam the letters “AI” into their investor summary.

      Tech has laid off a lot of employees, which means they are aware there is nothing else exciting in the near horizon. They also know they have to flog “AI” like crazy before people figure out there’s no “there” there.

      That “investors” scattered like frightened birds at the mere mention of a cheaper version means that they also know this is a bubble. Everyone wants the quick money. More importantly they don’t want to be the suckers left holding the bag.

        • sudo42@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          I follow EV battery tech a little. You’re not wrong that there is a lot of “oh its just around the bend” in battery development and tech development in general. I blame marketing for 80% of that.

          But battery technology is changing drastically. The giant cell phone market is pushing battery tech relentlessly. Add in EV and grid storage demand growth and the potential for some companies to land on top of a money printing machine is definitely there.

          We’re in a golden age of battery research. Exciting for our future, but it will be a while before we consumers will have clear best options.

    • AppleTea@lemmy.zip
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      It’s easier to sell people on the idea of a new technology or system that doesn’t have any historical precedent. All you have to do is list the potential upsides.

      Something like a school or a workplace training programme, those are known quantities. There’s a whole bunch of historical and currently-existing projects anyone can look at to gauge the cost. Your pitch has to be somewhat realistic compared to those, or it’s gonna sound really suspect.

    • alvvayson@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      Because the silicon valley bros had convinced the national security wonks in the Beltway that it was paramount for national security, technological leadership and economic prosperity.

      I think this will go down as the biggest grift in history.

      Kevin Walmsley reported on Deepseek 10 days ago. Last week, the smart money exited big tech. This week the panic starts.

      I’m getting big dot-com 2.0 vibes from all of this.

      https://youtube.com/@inside_china_business

    • surph_ninja@lemmy.world
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      And you could pay people to use an abacus instead of a calculator. But the advanced tech improves productivity for everyone, and helps their output.

      If you don’t get the tech, you should play with it more.

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        I get the tech, and still agree with the preposter. I’d even go so far as that it probably worsens a lot currently, as it’s generating a lot of bullshit that sounds great on the surface, but in reality is just regurgitated stuff that the AI has no clue of. For example I’m tired of reading AI generated text, when a hand written version would be much more precise and has some character at least…

        • Naia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          If you are blindly asking it questions without a grounding resources you’re gonning to get nonsense eventually unless it’s really simple questions.

          They aren’t infinite knowledge repositories. The training method is lossy when it comes to memory, just like our own memory.

          Give it documentation or some other context and ask it questions it can summerize pretty well and even link things across documents or other sources.

          The problem is that people are misusing the technology, not that the tech has no use or merit, even if it’s just from an academic perspective.

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            24 hours ago

            Yes, I know, I tried all kinds of inputs, ways to query it, including full code-bases etc. Long story short: I’m faster just not caring about AI (at the moment). As I said somewhere else here, I have a theoretical background in this area. Though speaking of, I think I really need to try out training or refining a DeepSeek model with our code-bases, whether it helps to be a good alternative to something like the dumb Github Copilot (which I’ve also disabled, because it produces a looot of garbage that I don’t want to waste my attention with…) Maybe it’s now finally possible to use at least for completion when it knows details about the whole code-base (not just snapshots such as Github CoPilot).

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                So unreliable boilerplate generator, you need to debug?

                Right I’ve seen that it’s somewhat nice to quickly generate bash scripts etc.

                It can certainly generate quick’n dirty scripts as a starter. But code quality is often supbar (and often incorrect), which triggers my perfectionism to make it better, at which point I should’ve written it myself…

                But I agree that it can often serve well for exploration, and sometimes you learn new stuff (if you weren’t expert in it at least, and you should always validate whether it’s correct).

                But actual programming in e.g. Rust is a catastrophe with LLMs (more common languages like js work better though).

                • SynopsisTantilize@lemm.ee
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                  I use C# and PS/CMD for my job. I think you’re right. It can create a decent template for setting things up. But it trips on its own dick with anything more intricate than simple 2 step commands.

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          It’s one thing to be ignorant. It’s quite another to be confidently so in the face of overwhelming evidence that you’re wrong. Impressive.

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            confidently so in the face of overwhelming evidence

            That I’d really like to see. And I mean more than the marketing bullshit that AI companies are doing…

            For the record I was one of the first jumping on the AI hype-train (as programmer, and computer-scientist with machine-learning background), following the development of GPT1-4, being excited about having to do less boilerplaty code etc. getting help about rough ideas etc. GPT4 was almost so far as being a help (similar with o1 etc. or Anthropics models). Though I seldom use AI currently (and I’m observing similar with other colleagues and people I know of) because it actually slows me down with my stuff or gives wrong ideas, having to argue, just to see it yet again saturating at a local-minimum (aka it doesn’t get better, no matter what input I try). Just so that I have to do it myself… (which I should’ve done in the first place…).

            Same is true for the image-generative side (i.e. first with GANs now with diffusion-based models).

            I can get into more details about transformer/attention-based-models and its current plateau phase (i.e. more hardware doesn’t actually make things significantly better, it gets exponentially more expensive to make things slightly better) if you really want…

            I hope that we do a breakthrough of course, that a model actually really learns reasoning, but I fear that that will take time, and it might even mean that we need different type of hardware.

            • surph_ninja@lemmy.world
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              Any other AI company, and most of that would be legitimate criticism of the overhype used to generate more funding. But how does any of that apply to DeepSeek, and the code & paper they released?

              • fuck_u_spez_in_particular@lemmy.world
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                DeepSeek

                Yeah it’ll be exciting to see where this goes, i.e. if it really develops into a useful tool, for certain. Though I’m slightly cautious non-the less. It’s not doing something significantly different (i.e. it’s still an LLM), it’s just a lot cheaper/efficient to train, and open for everyone (which is great).

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        “Improves productivity for everyone”

        Famously only one class benefits from productivity, while one generates the productivity. Can you explain what you mean, if you don’t mean capitalistic productivity?

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          I’m referring to output for amount of work put in.

          I’m a socialist. I care about increased output leading to increased comfort for the general public. That the gains are concentrated among the wealthy is not the fault of technology, but rather those who control it.

          Thank god for DeepSeek.

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      Education doesn’t make a tech CEO ridiculously wealthy, so there’s no draw for said CEOs to promote the shit out of education.

      Plus educated people tend to ask for more salary. Can’t do that and become a billionaire!

    • Redex@lemmy.world
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      Look at it in another way, people think this is the start of an actual AI revolution, as in full blown AGI or close to it or something very capable at least. Personally I don’t think we’re anywhere near something like that with the current technology, I think it’s a dead end, but if there’s even a small possibility of it being true, you want to invest early because the returns will be insane if it pans out. Full blown AGI would revolutionize everything, it would probably be the next industrial revolution after the internet.

      • probably2high@lemmy.world
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        Look at it in another way, people think this is the start of an actual AI revolution, as in full blown AGI or close to it or something very capable at least

        I think the bigger threat of revolution (and counter-revolution) is that of open source software. For people that don’t know anything about FOSS, they’ve been told for decades now that [XYZ] software is a tool you need and that’s only possible through the innovative and superhuman-like intelligent CEOs helping us with the opportunity to buy it.

        If everyone finds out that they’re actually the ones stifling progress and development, while manipulating markets to further enrich themselves and whatever other partners that align with that goal, it might disrupt the golden goose model. Not to mention defrauding the countless investors that thought they were holding rocket ship money that was actually snake oil.

        All while another country did that collectively and just said, “here, it’s free. You can even take the code and use it how you personally see fit, because if this thing really is that thing, it should be a tool anyone can access. Oh, and all you other companies, your code is garbage btw. Ours runs on a potato by comparison.”

        I’m just saying, the US has already shown they will go to extreme lengths to keep its citizens from thinking too hard about how its economic model might actually be fucking them while the rich guys just move on to the next thing they’ll sell us.

        ETA: a smaller scale example: the development of Wine, and subsequently Proton finally gave PC gamers a choice to move away from Windows if they wanted to.

    • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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      How would the investors profit from paying for someone’s education? By giving them a loan? Don’t we have enough problems with the student loan system without involving these assholes more?

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    Try asking DeepSeek something about Xi Jinping. "Sorry, it’s beyond my current scope’ :-) Wondering why even it cannot cite his official party biography :-)

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      For what it’s worth, I wouldn’t ask any chatbot about politics at all.

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      Try asking ChatGPT if Israel is committing genocide and watch it do the magical Hasbara dance around the subject.

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      The official hosting of it has censorship applied after the answer is generated, but from what I heard the locally run version has no censorship even though they could have theoretically trained it to.

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      It’s easy to mod the software to get rid of those censors

      Part of why the US is so afraid is because anyone can download it and start modding it easily, and because the rich make less money

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        Yes and no. Not many people can afford the hardware required to run the biggest LLMs. So the majority of people will just use the psyops vanilla version that China wants you to use. All while collecting more data and influencing the public like what TikTok is doing.

        Also another thing with Open source. It’s just as easy to be closed as it is open with zero warnings. They own the license. They control the narrative.

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    I’m so happy this happened. This is really a power move from China. The US was really riding the whole AI bubble. By “just” releasing a powerful open-source AI model they’ve fucked the not so open US AI companies. I’m not sure if this was planned from China or whether this is was really just a small company doing this because they wanted to, but either way this really damages the western economy. And its given western consumers a free alternative. A few million dollars invested (if we are to believe the cost figures) for a major disruption.

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      2 days ago

      Socialism/Communism will always outcompete the capitalists. And they know it, which is why the US invades, topples, or sanctions every country that moves towards worker controlled countries.

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        I disagree. Under the right conditions (read: actual competition instead of unregulated monopolies) I think a capitalist system be able to stay ahead, though I think both systems could compete depending on how they’re organized.

        But what I’m more interested in is you view that China is still Socialist/Communist. Isn’t DeepSeek a private company trying to maximize profits for itself by innovating, instead of a public company funded by the people? I don’t really know myself, but my perspective was that this was more of a capitalist vs capitalist situation. With one side (the US) kinda suffering from being so unregulated that innovation dies down.

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          Capitalism will by its very nature always lead to monopolies and depressed innovation. You cannot prevent corruption, while concentrating control of the means of production in the hands of a very few.

          They released DeepSeek for free. It was a side project the company worked on. How is releasing it for free in any way profit seeking?

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          That you had to qualify it with a date after it had been corrupted by the west, implies that you’re well aware of how well communism served for half a century before that.

          They went from a nation of dirt poor peasants, to a nuclear superpower driving the space race in just a couple of decades. All thanks to communism. And also why China is leaving us in the dust.

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            There are many instances of communism failing lmao

            There are also many current communist states that have less freedom than many capitalist states

            Also, you need to ask the Uyghurs how they’re feeling about their experience under the communist government you’re speaking so highly of at the moment.

            • BrainInABox@lemmy.ml
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              you need to ask the Uyghurs how they’re feeling about their experience under the communist government

              Everytime people ask regular Uyghurs, they’re usually happy enough with it. I’m guessing you mean ask Adrian Zenz and the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation to tell the Uyghurs what they think.

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              How many of those instances failed due to external factors, such as illegal sanctions or a western coup or western military aggression?

              Which communist states would you say have less freedom than your country? Let’s compare.

              The Uyghur genocide was debunked. Even the US state department was forced to admit they didn’t have the evidence to support their claims. In reality, western intelligence agencies were trying to radicalize the Uyghurs to destabilize the region, but China has been rehabilitating them. The intel community doesn’t like their terrorist fronts to be shut down.

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                LMAO found the pro-Xi propagandist account

                Either you’re brainwashed, are only reading one-sided articles, or you’re an adolescent with little world experience given how confidently you speak in absolutes, which doesn’t reflect how nuanced the global stage is.

                I’m not saying capitalism is the best, but communism won’t ALWAYS beat out capitalism (as it hasn’t regardless of external factors b/c if those regimes were strong enough they would be able to handle or recover from external pressures) nor does it REQUIRE negatively affecting others as your other comment says. You’re just delulu.

                Remember, while there maybe instances where all versions of a certain class of anything are equal, in most cases they are not. So blanketly categorizing as your have done just reflects your lack of historical perspective.

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                  You should really drop the overconfidence, and re-evaluate your biases and perspectives. Regurgitating western propaganda almost verbatim is not a good sign that you’re on the right path.

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              Any corrupt leaders are capable of committing genocide. The difference is capitalism requires genocide to continue functioning.

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                No it doesn’t. It requires imperialism. The genocides are simply efficient for the imperial machine creating settlements, but it’s not a requirement. They’re evidently avoidable and capitalists just repeatedly decide not to avoid it because they consider it cheaper to commit genocide rather than integrate more passively.

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        You don’t even realise how strong capitalism is in China.

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          It sounds like you don’t know what “capitalism” means. Market participation exists in other economy types, too. It’s how the means of production are controlled and the profits distributed that defines capitalism vs communism.

          And you don’t lift 800 million people out of poverty under capitalism. Or they’ve done a ridiculously bad job of concentrating profits into the hands of a very small few.

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            The issue with your original comment is that it’s simplified on many levels beyond what is acceptable. China has companies working on delivering highest financial output regardless of other citizens and their rights to have fair share in produced goods. They are by no means controlled by workers (why would they accept e. g. 996?) nor creating fair rules to others economically (e.g. Taobao and their alghorims pushing many sellers to sell bellow profitable levels just to maintain visibility on their site). Put it also into wider perspective: China started to move forward in quality of life only after Deng. US system is by no means bad but it doesn’t make Chinese one perfect.

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              I don’t think you understand how China’s economy works. Seems very clouded by anti-China propaganda.

              In reality, the working class exercises a great deal of control over the means of production in China, and the 996 culture you’re referring to is in fact illegal.

              https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-58381538.amp

              Again, capitalism vs communism is not defined by the existence of production/profits/markets, but how control and benefit of those systems is distributed.

        • surph_ninja@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Absolutely. More direct democracy. The whole point of representative democracy is issues of time and distance. Now that we can communicate fast and across the globe, average citizens should play a much larger & more active role in directing the government.

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            How do you solve the problem that half the country can’t even be bothered to participate once every four years?

            Don’t get me wrong, I’m with you 100%, but how would we get people to engage with such a system?

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              How do you solve the problem that half the country can’t even be bothered to participate once every four years?

              I assume you’re talking about the US electoral system?? That’s very different.

              but how would we get people to engage with such a system?

              By empowering them.

              Consider how the current electoral system disempowers people:

              1. Some people literally cannot vote or risk jeopardizing their job taking the day off, others face voter suppression tactics

              2. The FPTP system (esp. spoiler effect) and the present political circumstances mean that there are really only two viable options for political parties for most people, so many feel that neither option represents them, let alone their individual positions on policy

              3. Politics is widely considered to be corrupt and break electoral promises regularly. There is little faith in either party to represent voters

              But, in a system where you are able to represent yourself at will, engagement is actually rewarding and meaningful. It won’t magically make everyone care, but direct democracy alongside voter rights reform would likely make more people think it’s worth polling.

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                I hope you’re right. I would love to see it. I actually support mandatory voting like in Australia. With mostly current laws everyone could get a mail in ballot. If you don’t want to participate just check that box at the top, sign it, and send it in.

                Your system sounds much better but would require a lot more legislation.

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                  Well, it would require more than just legislation change. Truth be told, in the US, a working democracy requires some form of revolution since the people holding all the power benefit from the broken system. But on the other hand, organizations and communities (including territories of hundreds of thousands) practicing direct democracy on a smaller scale have seen success with these strategies.

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    I should really start looking into shorting stocks. I was looking at the news and Nvidia’s stock and thought “huh, the stock hasn’t reacted to these news at all yet, I should probably short this”.

    And then proceeded to do fuck all.

    I guess this is why some people are rich and others are like me.

    • peregrin5@lemm.ee
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      It’s been proven that people who do fuckall after throwing their money into mutual funds generally fare better than people actively monitoring and making stock moves.

      You’re probably fine.

      I never bought NVIDIA in the first place so this news doesn’t affect me.

      If anything now would be a good time to buy NVIDIA. But I probably won’t.

      • MutilationWave@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        The vast majority of my invested money is in SPY. I had a lot of “money” wiped out yesterday. It’s already trending back up. I’m holding for now.

    • Knock_Knock_Lemmy_In@lemmy.world
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      It’s pretty difficult to open a true short position. Providers like Robinhood create contract for differences which are subject to their TOS.

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    3 days ago

    Good. That shit is way overvalued.

    There is no way that Nvidia are worth 3 times as much as TSMC, the company that makes all their shit and more besides.

    I’m sure some of my market tracker funds will lose value, and they should, because they should never have been worth this much to start with.

    • CleoTheWizard@lemmy.world
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      It’s because Nvidia is an American company and also because they make final stage products. American companies right now are all overinflated and almost none of the stocks are worth what they’re at because of foreign trading influence.

      As much as people whine about inflation here, the US didn’t get hit as bad as many other countries and we recovered quickly which means that there is a lot of incentive for other countries to invest here. They pick our top movers, they invest in those. What you’re seeing is people bandwagoning onto certain stocks because the consistent gains create more consistent gains for them.

      The other part is that yes, companies who make products at the end stage tend to be worth a lot more than people trading more fundamental resources or parts. This is true of almost every industry except oil.

      • bobalot@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        It is also because the USA is the reserve currency of the world with open capital markets.

        Savers of the world (including countries like Germany and China who have excess savings due to constrained consumer demand) dump their savings into US assets such as stocks.

        This leads to asset bubbles and an uncompetitively high US dollar.

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          3 days ago

          The current administration is working real hard on removing trust and value of anything American.

          • bobalot@lemmy.world
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            The root problem they are trying to fix is real (systemic trade imbalances) but they way they are trying to fix it is terrible and won’t work.

            1. Only a universally applied tariff would work in theory but would require other countries not to retaliate (there will 100% be retaliation).

            2. It doesn’t really solve the root cause, capital inflows into the USA rather than purchasing US goods and services.

            3. Trump wants to maintain being the reserve currency which is a big part of the problem (the strength of currency may not align with domestic conditions, i.e. high when it needs to be low).

      • CheeseNoodle@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        The US is also a regulations haven compared to other developed economies, corporations get away with shit in most places but America is on a whole other level of regulatory capture.

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        3 days ago

        Or from the sounds of it, doing things more efficiently.
        Fewer cycles required, less hardware required.

        Maybe this was an inevitability, if you cut off access to the fast hardware, you create a natural advantage for more efficient systems.

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          That’s generally how tech goes though. You throw hardware at the problem until it works, and then you optimize it to run on laptops and eventually phones. Usually hardware improvements and software optimizations meet somewhere in the middle.

          Look at photo and video editing, you used to need a workstation for that, and now you can get most of it on your phone. Surely AI is destined to follow the same path, with local models getting more and more robust until eventually the beefy cloud services are no longer required.

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            The problem for American tech companies is that they didn’t even try to move to stage 2.

            OpenAI is hemorrhaging money even on their most expensive subscription and their entire business plan was to hemorrhage money even faster to the point they would use entire power stations to power their data centers. Their plan makes about as much sense as digging your self out of a hole by trying to dig to the other side of the globe.

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              Hey, my friends and I would’ve made it to China if recess was a bit longer.

              Seriously though, the goal for something like OpenAI shouldn’t be to sell products to end customers, but to license models to companies that sell “solutions.” I see these direct to consumer devices similarly to how GPU manufacturers see reference cards or how Valve sees the Steam Deck: they’re a proof of concept for others to follow.

              OpenAI should be looking to be more like ARM and less like Apple. If they do that, they might just grow into their valuation.

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        China really has nothing to do with it, it could have been anyone. It’s a reaction to realizing that GPT4-equivalent AI models are dramatically cheaper to train than previously thought.

        It being China is a noteable detail because it really drives the nail in the coffin for NVIDIA, since China has been fenced off from having access to NVIDIA’s most expensive AI GPUs that were thought to be required to pull this off.

        It also makes the USA gov look extremely foolish to have made major foreign policy and relationship sacrifices in order to try to delay China by a few years, when it’s January and China has already caught up, those sacrifices did not pay off, in fact they backfired and have benefited China and will allow them to accelerate while hurting USA tech/AI companies

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        3 days ago

        It’s a reaction to thinking China has better AI

        I don’t think this is the primary reason behind Nvidia’s drop. Because as long as they got a massive technological lead it doesn’t matter as much to them who has the best model, as long as these companies use their GPUs to train them.

        The real change is that the compute resources (which is Nvidia’s product) needed to create a great model suddenly fell of a cliff. Whereas until now the name of the game was that more is better and scale is everything.

        China vs the West (or upstart vs big players) matters to those who are investing in creating those models. So for example Meta, who presumably spends a ton of money on high paying engineers and data centers, and somehow got upstaged by someone else with a fraction of their resources.

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            Looking at the market cap of Nvidia vs their competitors the market belives it is, considering they just lost more than AMD/Intel and the likes are worth combined and still are valued at $2.9 billion.

            And with technology i mean both the performance of their hardware and the software stack they’ve created, which is a big part of their dominance.

            • sith@lemmy.zip
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              Yeah. I don’t believe market value is a great indicator in this case. In general, I would say that capital markets are rational at a macro level, but not micro. This is all speculation/gambling.

              My guess is that AMD and Intel are at most 1 year behind Nvidia when it comes to tech stack. “China”, maybe 2 years, probably less.

              However, if you can make chips with 80% performance at 10% price, its a win. People can continue to tell themselves that big tech always will buy the latest and greatest whatever the cost. It does not make it true. I mean, it hasn’t been true for a really long time. Google, Meta and Amazon already make their own chips. That’s probably true for DeepSeek as well.

              • golli@lemm.ee
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                Yeah. I don’t believe market value is a great indicator in this case. In general, I would say that capital markets are rational at a macro level, but not micro. This is all speculation/gambling.

                I have to concede that point to some degree, since i guess i hold similar views with Tesla’s value vs the rest of the automotive Industry. But i still think that the basic hirarchy holds true with nvidia being significantly ahead of the pack.

                My guess is that AMD and Intel are at most 1 year behind Nvidia when it comes to tech stack. “China”, maybe 2 years, probably less.

                Imo you are too optimistic with those estimations, particularly with Intel and China, although i am not an expert in the field.

                As i see it AMD seems to have a quite decent product with their instinct cards in the server market on the hardware side, but they wish they’d have something even close to CUDA and its mindshare. Which would take years to replicate. Intel wish they were only a year behind Nvidia. And i’d like to comment on China, but tbh i have little to no knowledge of their state in GPU development. If they are “2 years, probably less” behind as you say, then they should have something like the rtx 4090, which was released end of 2022. But do they have something that even rivals the 2000 or 3000 series cards?

                However, if you can make chips with 80% performance at 10% price, its a win. People can continue to tell themselves that big tech always will buy the latest and greatest whatever the cost. It does not make it true.

                But the issue is they all make their chips at the same manufacturer, TSMC, even Intel in the case of their GPUs. So they can’t really differentiate much on manufacturing costs and are also competing on the same limited supply. So no one can offer 80% of performance at 10% price, or even close to it. Additionally everything around the GPU (datacenters, rack space, power useage during operation etc.) also costs, so it is only part of the overall package cost and you also want to optimize for your limited space. As i understand it datacenter building and power delivery for them is actually another limiting factor right now for the hyperscalers.

                Google, Meta and Amazon already make their own chips. That’s probably true for DeepSeek as well.

                Google yes with their TPUs, but the others all use Nvidia or AMD chips to train. Amazon has their Graviton CPUs, which are quite competitive, but i don’t think they have anything on the GPU side. DeepSeek is way to small and new for custom chips, they evolved out of a hedge fund and just use nvidia GPUs as more or less everyone else.

                • sith@lemmy.zip
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                  3 hours ago

                  Thanks for high effort reply.

                  The Chinese companies probably use SIMC over TSMC from now on. They were able to do low volume 7 nm last year. Also, Nvidia and “China” are not on the same spot on the tech s-curve. It will be much cheaper for China (and Intel/AMD) to catch up, than it will be for Nvidia to maintain the lead. Technological leaps and reverse engineering vs dimishing returns.

                  Also, expect that the Chinese government throws insane amounts of capital at this sector right now. So unless Stargate becomes a thing (though I believe the Chinese invest much much more), there will not be fair competition (as if that has ever been a thing anywhere anytime). China also have many more tools, like optional command economy. The US has nothing but printing money and manipulating oligarchs on a broken market.

                  I’m not sure about 80/10 exactly of course, but it is in that order of magnitude, if you’re willing to not run newest fancy stuff. I believe the MI300X goes for approx 1/2 of the H100 nowadays and is MUCH better on paper. We don’t know the real performance because of NDA (I believe). It used to be 1/4. If you look at VRAM per $, the ratio is about 1/10 for the 1/4 case. Of course, the price gap will shrink at the same rate as ROCm matures and customers feel its safe to use AMD hardware for training.

                  So, my bet is max 2 years for “China”. At least when it comes to high-end performance per dollar. Max 1 year for AMD and Intel (if Intel survive).

      • nieceandtows@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        From what I understand, it’s more that it takes a lot less money to train your own llms with the same powers with this one than to pay license to one of the expensive ones. Somebody correct me if I’m wrong

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        Does it still need people spending huge amounts of time to train models?

        After doing neural networks, fuzzy logic, etc. in university, I really question the whole usability of what is called “AI” outside niche use cases.

        • CheeseNoodle@lemmy.world
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          I wouldn’t be surprised if China spent more on AI development than the west did, sure here we spent tens of billions while China only invested a few million but that few million was actually spent on the development while out of the tens of billions all but 5$ was spent on bonuses and yachts.

      • tburkhol@lemmy.world
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        Exactly. Galaxy brains on Wall Street realizing that nvidia’s monopoly pricing power is coming to an end. This was inevitable - China has 4x as many workers as the US, trained in the best labs and best universities in the world, interns at the best companies, then, because of racism, sent back to China. Blocking sales of nvidia chips to China drives them to develop their own hardware, rather than getting them hooked on Western hardware. China’s AI may not be as efficient or as good as the West right now, but it will be cheaper, and it will get better.

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      It’s coming, Pelosi sold her shares like a month ago.

      It’s going to crash, if not for the reasons she sold for, as more and more people hear she sold, they’re going to sell because they’ll assume she has insider knowledge due to her office.

      Which is why politicians (and spouses) shouldn’t be able to directly invest into individual companies.

      Even if they aren’t doing anything wrong, people will follow them and do what they do. Only a truly ignorant person would believe it doesn’t have an effect on other people.

      • ShinkanTrain@lemmy.ml
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        It’s coming, Pelosi sold her shares like a month ago.

        Yeah but only cause she was really disappointed with the 5000 series lineup. Can you blame her for wanting real rasterization improvements?

        • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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          Everyone’s disappointed with the 5000 series…

          They’re giving up on improving rasterazation and focusing on “ai cores” because they’re using gpus to pay for the research into AI.

          “Real” core count is going down on the 5000 series.

          It’s not what gamers want, but they’re counting on people just buying the newest before asking if newer is really better. It’s why they’re already cutting 4000 series production, they just won’t give people the option.

          I think everything under 4070 super is already discontinued

        • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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          3 days ago

          You joke but there’s a lot of grandma/grandpa gamers these days. Remember someone who played PC games back in the 80s would be on their 50s or 60s now. Or even older if they picked up the hobby as an adult in the 80s

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      I just hope it means I can get a high end GPU for less than a grand one day.

      • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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        Prices rarely, if ever, go down and there is a push across the board to offload things “to the cloud” for a range of reasons.

        That said: If your focus is on gaming, AMD is REAL good these days and, if you can get past their completely nonsensical naming scheme, you can often get a really good GPU using “last year’s” technology for 500-800 USD (discounted to 400-600 or so).

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        I’m using an Rx6700xt which you can get for about £300 and it works fine.

        Edit: try using ollama on your PC. If your CPU is capable, that software should work out the rest.

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      If anything, this will accelerate the AI hype, as big leaps forward have been made without increased resource usage.

      • Alphane Moon@lemmy.world
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        Something is got to give. You can’t spend ~$200 billion annually on capex and get a mere $2-3 billion return on this investment.

        I understand that they are searching for a radical breakthrough “that will change everything”, but there is also reasons to be skeptical about this (e.g. documents revealing that Microsoft and OpenAI defined AGI as something that can get them $100 billion in annual revenue as opposed to some specific capabilities).

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    3 days ago

    What the fuck are markets when you can automate making money on them???

    Ive been WTF about the stock market for a long time but now it’s obviously a scam.

    • thistleboy@lemmy.world
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      The stock market is nothing more than a barometer for the relative peace of mind of rich people.

      • nomy@lemmy.zip
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        2 days ago

        Economics is a social science not a hard science, it’s highly reactive to rumors and speculation. The stock market kind of does just run on vibes.

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    I think this prompted investors to ask “where’s the ROI?”.

    Current AI investment hype isn’t based on anything tangible. At least the amount of investment isn’t, it is absurd to think that trillion dollars that was put in the space already, even before that Softbanks deal is going to be returned. The models still hallucinate as it is inherent to the architecture, we are nowhere near replacing the workers but we got chatbots that “when they work sometimes, then they are kind of good?” and mediocre off-putting pictures. Is there any value? Sure, it’s not NFTs. But the correction might be brutal.

    Interestingly enough, DeepSeek’s model is released just before Q4 earning’s call season, so we will see if it has a compounding effect with another statement from big players that they burned massive amount of compute and USD only to get milquetoast improvements and get owned by a small Chinese startup that allegedly can do all that for 5 mil.

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      hype isn’t based on anything tangible

      So just like crypto

      EDIT: The crypto bros out in full force… and right on cue proudly proclaiming they don’t understand the difference between the value of blockchain technology (which so far has not had a ton of real world value outside of mostly impractical database applications, other than furthering climate change and buying drugs) vs the SPECULATIVE value of coins since coins have no real value factors to back up their SPECULATIVE value. Stocks often have real value that back up their value, like company profits or products. Stop drinking kool aid to the point of literal zero critical thinking, jfc.

      • FightToAdapt@slrpnk.net
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        I think that the technology itself has been widely adopted and used. There are many examples in medicine, military, entertainment. But OpenAI and other hyperscalers are a bad business that burns through a loooot of cash. Same with Meta AI program. And while this has been a norm with tech darlings that they usually don’t break even for a long time, what’s unprecedented is the rate of loss and further calls for even more money even though there isn’t any clear path from what we have to AGI. All hangs on Altman and other biz-dev vague promises, threats and a “vibe” that they create.

      • alvvayson@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        I disagree.

        Like it or hate it, crypto is here to stay.

        And it’s actually one of the few technologies that, at least with some of the coins, empowers normal people.

          • comfy@lemmy.ml
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            2 days ago

            Try buying Monero, it is very hard to buy.

            • Acquire BTC (there are even ATMs for this in many countries)
            • Trade for XMR using one of the many non-KYC services like WizardSwap or exch

            I haven’t looked into whether that’s illegal in some jurisdictions but it’s really really easy, once you know that’s an option.

            Or you could even just trade directly with anyone who owns XMR. Obviously easier for some people than others but it’s a real option.

            Both of these methods don’t even require personal details like ID/name/phone number.

          • alvvayson@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            3 days ago

            They have made it harder, but it’s not really hard.

            Just buy any regulated crypto and convert. Cake Wallet makes it easy, but there are many other ways.

            I myself hold Bitcoin and Monero.

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        I disagree - before Bitcoin there was no venmo, cashapp, etc. It took weeks to move big money around. I’m not saying shit like NFT’s ever made sense, and meme coins are fucking stupid - unfortunately the crypto world has been taken over by scammers - but don’t shit on the technology

        • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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          It took weeks to move big money around.

          Lol this is just either a statement out of ignorance or a complete lie. Wire transfers didn’t take weeks. Checks didn’t take weeks to clear, and most people aren’t moving “big money” via fucking cash app either.

          “Big money” isn’t paying half for an Uber unless you’re like 16 years old.

          • AnagrammadiCodeina@feddit.it
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            2 days ago

            In europe i can send any amount (like up to 100k ) in just a few days since 20 years, to anyone with a bank account in europe, from my computer or phone.

            Also, since 2025 every bank allows me to send istant money to any other bank account. For free.

          • Isthisreddit@lemmy.world
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            It’s not a statement out of ignorance and it’s not a lie. Most people don’t try to move huge money around so I’ll illustrate what I had to go through - I had a huge sum of money I had in an online investing company. I had a very time critical situation I needed the money for, so I cashed out my investments - the company only cashed out via check sent via registered mail (maybe they did transfers for smaller amounts, but for the sum I had it was check only). It took almost two weeks for me to get that check. When I deposited that check with my bank, the bank had a mandatory 5-7 business day wait to clear (once again, smaller checks they deposit immediately and then do the clearing process - BIG checks they don’t do that, so I had to wait another week). Once cleared, I had to move the money to another bank, and guess what - I couldn’t take that much cash out, daily transfers are capped at like $1500 or whatever they were, so I had to get a check from the bank. The other bank made me wait another 5-7 business day as well, because the check was just too damn big.

            4 weeks it took me to move huge money around, and of course I missed the time critical thing I really needed the money for.

            I’m just a random person, not a business, no business accounts, etc. The system just isn’t designed for small folk to move big money

            • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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              It doesn’t take weeks to do a wire transfer. You had some one off weirdo situation and you’re pretending like it’s universally applicable. It took me longer to cash out 5k of doge a couple of years ago than it takes me to do “big money” transfers.

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            It depends on the bank and the amount you are trying to move.There are banks that might take a week (five business days) or so though very rare and there are banks that might do it instantly. I once used a bank in the US to move money and they sent a physical check and this was domestic not international.

            Edit: I thought he meant a week not weeks. Normally a max of five working days.

              • TheMachineStops@discuss.tchncs.de
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                I am not taking about money being held, I talking about regulations and horrible banks not technology. Yes, the current technology allows you instant transfer, but it still depends on the bank. For example some banks allow free international transfers while others require a small fee, some banks you can do the transfer online while others you have to go to the branch in person. You don’t have to go through a bank with crypto, sometimes it is faster and it is definitely more private.

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          Wtf? Venmo / cashapp are descendent from PayPal which was released ages before any major crypto.

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          3 days ago

          Since before bitcoin we’ve had Faster Payments in UK. I can transfer money directly to anyone else’s bank account and it’s effectively instant. It’s also free. Venmo and cashapp don’t serve a purpose here.

          • daellat@lemmy.world
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            3 days ago

            Same in NL most (all?) banks here have an app that lets you transfer money near instantly, create payment requests, execute payments for online orders by scanning a code, etc. It’s great I think.

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            2 days ago

            Helpfully, because bitcoin gets all the traderbro attention, monero has actually ended up being (relatively) stable because it has more of a purpose.

    • TheMachineStops@discuss.tchncs.de
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      You fogot NSFW content, many people are making money using it. There is also AI advertising using fake models, very lucrative business.

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        2 days ago

        I’m not saying that it doesn’t have any uses but the costs outpace the investments done by a mile. Current LLM and vLLMs help with efficiency to a degree but this is not sustainable and the correction is overdue.

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          I was making a joke, I agree with you it is over hyped. It basically just takes the training data mixes it up and gives you a result. It is not the so called life changing thing that they are advertising. It is good for writing email though.

    • Isthisreddit@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      I have a dirty suspicion that the “where’s the ROI?” talking point is actually a calculated and collaborated strategy by big wall street banks to panic retail investors to sell so they can gobble up shares at a discount - trump is going to be pumping (at minimum) hundreds of BILLIONS into these companies in the near future.

      Call me a conspiracy guy, but I’ve seen this playbook many many times

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        I mean, I’m working on that tech and the evaluation boggles my mind. This is nowhere near worth what is put into it. It rides on empty promises that may or may not materialize (I can’t say with 100% certainty that a breakthrough happen), but current models are massively overvalued. I’ve seen that happen with ConvNets (Hinton saying we won’t need radiologists in five years in…2016, self-driving cars promised every two years, yadda yadda) but nothing to that scale.

        • Isthisreddit@lemmy.world
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          Right - the entire stock market doesn’t make sense, doesn’t seem to stop Tesla or any of the other massively overvalued stocks. Btw stocks have been massively overvalued for over a decade, but that’s a different topic

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    3 days ago

    Shovel vendors scrambling for solid ground as prospectors start to understand geology.

    …that is, this isn’t yet the end of the AI bubble. It’s just the end of overvaluing hardware because efficiency increased on the software side, there’s still a whole software-side bubble to contend with.

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      3 days ago

      there’s still a whole software-side bubble to contend with

      They’re ultimately linked together in some ways (not all). OpenAI has already been losing money on every GPT subscription that they charge a premium for because they had the best product, now that premium must evaporate because there are equivalent AI products on the market that are much cheaper. This will shake things up on the software side too. They probably need more hype to stay afloat

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      The software side bubble should take a hit here because:

      • Trained model made available for download and offline execution, versus locking it behind a subscription friendly cloud only access. Not the first, but it is more famous.

      • It came from an unexpected organization, which throws a wrench in the assumption that one of the few known entities would “win it”.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      …that is, this isn’t yet the end of the AI bubble.

      The “bubble” in AI is predicated on proprietary software that’s been oversold and underdelivered.

      If I can outrun OpenAI’s super secret algorithm with 1/100th the physical resources, the $13B Microsoft handed Sam Altman’s company starts looking like burned capital.

      And the way this blows up the reputation of AI hype-artists makes it harder for investors to be induced to send US firms money. Why not contract with Hangzhou DeepSeek Artificial Intelligence directly, rather than ask OpenAI to adopt a model that’s better than anything they’ve produced to date?

    • meliante@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      I really think GenAI is comparable to the internet in terms of what it will allow mankind in a couple of decades.

      Lots of people thought the internet was a fad and saw no future for it …

      • barsoap@lemm.ee
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        Lots of techies loved the internet, built it, and were all early adopters. Lots of normies didn’t see the point.

        With AI it’s pretty much the other way around: CEOs saying “we don’t need programmers, any more”, while people who understand the tech roll their eyes.

        • oldfart@lemm.ee
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          2 days ago

          Back then the CEOs were babbling about information superhighways while tech rolled their eyes

        • meliante@lemmy.world
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          I believe programming languages will become obsolete. You’ll still need professionals that will be experts in leading the machines but not nearly as hands on as presently. The same for a lot of professions that exist currently.

          I like to compare GenAI to the assembly line when it was created, but instead of repetitive menial tasks, it’s repetitive mental tasks that it improves/performs.

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            Oh great you’re one of them. Look I can’t magically infuse tech literacy into you, you’ll have to learn to program and, crucially, understand how much programming is not about giving computers instructions.

            • meliante@lemmy.world
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              Let’s talk in five years. There’s no point in discussing this right now. You’re set on what you believe you know and I’m set on what I believe I know.

              And, piece of advice, don’t assume others lack tech literacy because they don’t agree with you, it just makes you look like a brat that can’t discuss things maturely and invites the other part to be a prick as well.

              Especially because programming is quite fucking literally giving computers instructions, despite what you believe keyboard monkeys do. You wanker!

              What? You think “developers” are some kind on mythical beings that possess the mystical ability of speaking to the machines in cryptic tongues?

              They’re a dime a dozen, the large majority of “developers” are just cannon fodder that are not worth what they think they are.

              Ironically, the real good ones probably brought about their demise.

              • barsoap@lemm.ee
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                Especially because programming is quite fucking literally giving computers instructions, despite what you believe keyboard monkeys do. You wanker!

                What? You think “developers” are some kind on mythical beings that possess the mystical ability of speaking to the machines in cryptic tongues?

                First off, you’re contradicting yourself: Is programming about “giving instructions in cryptic languages”, or not?

                Then, no: Developers are mythical beings who possess the magical ability of turning vague gesturing full of internal contradictions, wishful thinking, up to right-out psychotic nonsense dreamt up by some random coke-head in a suit, into hard specifications suitable to then go into algorithm selection and finally into code. Typing shit in a cryptic language is the easy part, also, it’s not cryptic, it’s precise.

                • meliante@lemmy.world
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                  You must be a programmer. Can’t understand shit of what you’re told to do and then blame the client for “not knowing how it works”. Typical. Stereotypical even!

                  Read it again moron, or should I use an LLM to make it simpler for your keyboard monkey brain?

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            3 days ago

            That’s not the way it works. And I’m not even against that.

            It sill won’t work this way a few years later.

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              I’m not talking about this being a snap transition. It will take several years but I do think this tech will evolve in that direction.

              I’ve been working with LLMs since month 1 and in these short 24 months things have progressed in a way that is mind boggling.

              I’ve produced more and better than ever and we’re developing a product that improves and makes some repetitive “sweat shop” tasks regarding documentation a thing of the past for people. It really is cool.

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                2 days ago

                In part we agree. However there are two things to consider.

                For one, the llms are plateauing pretty much now. So they are dependant on more quality input. Which, basically, they replace. So perspecively imo the learning will not work to keep this up. (in other fields like nature etc there’s comparatively endless input for training, so it will keep on working there).

                The other thing is, as we likely both agree, this is not intelligence. It has it’s uses. But you said to replace programming, which in my opinion will never work: were missing the critical intelligence element. It might be there at some point. Maybe llm will help there, maybe not, we might see. But for now we don’t have that piece of the puzzle and it will not be able to replace human work with (new) thought put into it.

      • Auli@lemmy.ca
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        3 days ago

        Sure but you had the .com bubble but it was still useful. Same as AI in a big bubble right now doesn’t mean it won’t be useful.

        • meliante@lemmy.world
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          Oh yes, there definitely is a bubble, but I don’t believe that means the tech is worthless, not even close to worthless.

      • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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        3 days ago

        I don’t know. In a lot of usecase AI is kinda crap, but there’s certain usecase where it’s really good. Honestly I don’t think people are giving enough thought to it’s utility in early-middle stages of creative works where an img2img model can take the basic composition from the artist, render it then the artist can go in and modify and perfect it for the final product. Also video games that use generative AI are going to be insane in about 10-15 years. Imagine an open world game where it generates building interiors and NPCs as you interact with them, even tying the stuff the NPCs say into the buildings they’re in, like an old sailer living in a house with lots of pictures of boats and boat models, or the warrior having tons of books about battle and decorative weapons everywhere all in throw away structures that would have previously been closed set dressing. Maybe they’ll even find sane ways to create quests on the fly that don’t feel overly cookie-cutter? Life changing? Of course not, but definitely a cool technology with a lot of potential

        Also realistically I don’t think there’s going to be long term use for AI models that need a quarter of a datacenter just to run, and they’ll all get tuned down to what can run directly on a phone efficiently. Maybe we’ll see some new accelerators become common place maybe we won’t.