Daily Archives: April 22, 2024
Drake Uses AI Tupac and Snoop Dogg Vocals on ‘Taylor Made Freestyle
The beef between Drake and what continues to be a strong sect of the hip-hop community grows deeper. On Friday night (April 19), the rapper released a song on his social media entitled “Taylor Made Freestyle,” which uses AI vocals from Tupac Shakur and Snoop Dogg on a stopgap between diss records as he awaits Kendrick Lamar’s reply to his freshly released “Push Ups.” — Read More
How Meta is paving the way for synthetic social networks
On Thursday, the AI hype train rolled through Meta’s family of apps. The company’s Meta AI assistant, a ChatGPT-like bot that can answer a wide range of questions, is beginning to roll out broadly across Facebook, Messenger, Instagram and WhatsApp.
Powering the bot is Llama 3, the latest and most capable version of Meta’s large language model. As with its predecessors — and in contrast to models from OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic — Llama 3 is open source. Today Meta made it available in two sizes: one with 8 billion parameters, and one with 70 billion parameters. (Parameters are the variables inside a large language model; in general, the more parameters a model contains, the smarter and more sophisticated its output.) — Read More
Maybe I don’t want a Rosey the Robot after all
Boston Dynamics’ latest — deliberately creepy? — humanoid robot has me rethinking my smart home robot dreams.
As a child of the 1980s, my perception of the smart home has been dominated by the idea that one day, we will all have Rosey the Robot-style robots roaming our homes — dusting the mantelpiece, preparing dinner, and unloading the dishwasher. (That last one is a must; we were smart enough to come up with a robot to wash our dishes; can’t we please come up with one that can also unload them?)
However, after seeing Boston Dynamics’ latest droid, Atlas, unveiled this week, my childhood dreams are fast turning into a smart home nightmare. While The Jetsons’ robot housekeeper had a steely charm, accentuated by its frilly apron, the closer we come to having humanoid robots in our home, the more terrifying it appears they will be. Not so much because of how they look — I could see Atlas in an apron — but more because of what they represent. — Read More
The Universal Approximation Theorem
Artificial Intelligence has become very present in the media in the last couple of years. At the end of 2022, ChatGPT has captured the world’s attention, showing at least a hundred million users around the globe the extraordinary potential of large language models. Large language models such as LLaMA, Bard and ChatGPT mimic intelligent behavior equivalent to, or indistinguishable from, that of a human in specific areas (i.e., Imitation Game or Turing Test). Stephen Wolfram has written an article about how ChatGPT works.
Year-end 2022 might therefore be a watershed moment for human mankind since Artificial Intelligence has now the potential to change the way how humans think and work
… All these achievements have one thing in common – they are build on a model using an Artificial Neural Networks (ANN). … ANN are very good function approximators provided that big data of the corresponding domain is available. Almost all practical problems such as playing a game of Go or mimic intelligent behavior can be represented by mathematical functions.
The corresponding theorem that formulates this basic idea of approximation is called Universal Approximation Theorem. It is a fundamental result in the field of ANN, which states that certain types of neural network can approximate certain function to any desired degree of accuracy. This theorem suggest that a neural network is capable of learning complex patterns and relationships in data as long as certain conditions are fulfilled.
The Universal Approximation Theorem is the root-cause why ANN are so successful and capable in solving a wide range of problems in machine learning and other fields. — Read More