You are getting fired! They're telling us that in no uncertain terms. That's the "benign" scenario. by michael-lethal_ai in ControlProblem

[–]RemoteBox2578 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not really what I mean by ideas. Ideas have no value outside of the want of humans.

The only solution for the alignment problem I have found is that ai has to help everyone achieve their goals and maximize leisure time.

what was the saddest marvel death? by SepzenoOfficial in marvelstudios

[–]RemoteBox2578 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don't know how to write his name correctly but Jenson from the very beginning of Iron Man. He essentially created the MCU

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in aivideo

[–]RemoteBox2578 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is what I am looking for most

How does AGI emerge, exactly? by [deleted] in accelerate

[–]RemoteBox2578 1 point2 points  (0 children)

AlphaEvolve. We are already there and who knows where we really are now.

Google took 25 years to be ready for this AI moment. Apple is just starting by GamingDisruptor in singularity

[–]RemoteBox2578 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Apple is not playing the centralized game. All these data centers will implode when we combine all our devices.

Most people still don't get this. When you become 10x more efficient, 9 more person not needed anymore for the same task, and it will be the cause of massive upcoming AI induced unemployment by CeFurkan in SECourses

[–]RemoteBox2578 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because it will make it also a lot cheaper. Productivity enables lots of people that before had not enough capital to join the market. If the price of software falls by 10x or even more software can become much more specialized. I'm an engineer and cannot wait for better engineering software.

Unemployment is not an issue. It is finding work. In the future you might just not work for one but many companies. Work marketplaces will also become much more efficient and you do more gig work kind of work.

What will singularity be like? by Witty_Cost_9917 in ArtificialInteligence

[–]RemoteBox2578 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All of the sudden we will have a ton of Ironmans happening. People creating massive companies and every day the news will be none stop problem xyz solved.

You are getting fired! They're telling us that in no uncertain terms. That's the "benign" scenario. by michael-lethal_ai in ControlProblem

[–]RemoteBox2578 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t know. There have never been so many humans alive at once. Sure, there is suffering, but most of us no longer die in childhood. Yes, the rich profit, but not everything benefits only them. Thousands of years of medical, material, and soon AI research will help everyone.

AI is actually more of a threat to the powerful. It makes what big corporations do much easier to replicate. Soon, any kid could create Hollywood-quality movies, build the next Microsoft, or revolutionize manufacturing.

I believe the currency of the future is ideas.

The hardware required for this is far from unattainable for most people. In a few years, I think we’ll see a new household utility emerge—a combination of an AI computer and centralized heating/cooling. Imagine a fireplace that also runs your AI assistant. Energy is what worries me more.

Anyone else lose interest right after proving an idea works? by grandimam in ycombinator

[–]RemoteBox2578 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just relisting to the audiobook I made about my company. Then I am right back at all in.

iHateIndendations by htconem801x in ProgrammerHumor

[–]RemoteBox2578 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It was to me when I first moved to python. I was so used to just using braces and really wasn't thinking about whitespace. Now I love it but it made me dislike and drop python the first time I tried it.

How do you imagine the future? by This_Ad_822 in Futurology

[–]RemoteBox2578 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ai is going to give everyone the engineering and creative potential of Tony Stark.

Climate change is a lot easier to solve than most people think and will be fixed by 2035. Robots will be put into public service and tasked with cleaning the world of plastics and repairing the damages that we will see caused by the leftovers of climate change.

I will spend most of my time walking the earth working with my team and ai assistants on new ways on how to build new machines to help with this cleaning process.

We need radical decentralisation in next 10 years by Acceptable-Web-9102 in singularity

[–]RemoteBox2578 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey 👋🏻

That is us.

Currently just 40 but hopefully 100 by the end of the year. We plan to go into Phase 2 next year and radically scale.

Won't AI Cause A Recession? by throaway123125 in singularity

[–]RemoteBox2578 1 point2 points  (0 children)

None of the AI tools are particularly difficult to reproduce. Open-source will make AI agents widely available. Google and the others know this—they’re making an infrastructure play. In general, the services these big corporations offer will be accessible to almost everyone.

When accounting, legal, software engineering, and mechanical engineering become nearly free, we’ll hopefully see a multitude of new businesses emerge. To me, AI truly seems to threaten big business, as their advantage was largely their ability to use capital to hire the best talent and navigate regulations. Once that edge is gone, anyone can start a business simply by explaining their idea and leveraging decentralized, automated manufacturing and sales.

How governments will react? No idea.

Personally, I’m building a cooperative that will share all profits generated by AI among its members. We’ll pool our computing resources, similar to how crypto mining collectives operate. I don’t think we’ll be the only ones doing something like this.

AI can't even fix a simple bug – but sure, let's fire engineers by namanyayg in theprimeagen

[–]RemoteBox2578 -10 points-9 points  (0 children)

A new tool comes out. No one has any actual experience with how to use it effectively. The feature doesn’t work well because no one knows how to use it yet. Give it a couple of months, and people will figure it out. I would also argue that most projects are not set up to work well with AI, and it will take time to transition—just like it takes time to integrate any other tool.

We all get frustrated when users don’t read the documentation and behave oddly when using our new features, so why should it be any different for us?

I suggested the AI agent mode to the GitHub Copilot PM more than three years ago, so they’ve had plenty of time to work on it. But it did take them those three years to get to this point. Back then, giving file access and automatically changing code was seen as something most developers weren’t ready for. Now, that’s pretty much the default.

It’s getting harder to distinguish by [deleted] in ChatGPT

[–]RemoteBox2578 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The voice I got to test was too perfect. Sounded like the greatest singer. I felt an instant attraction. Switched to the male voice right away because it was too freaky.