To be honest, I lost all interest in the new AMD CPUs because they fucking named the thing "AI" (with zero real-world application).
I'm in the market for a new PC next month and I'm gonna get the 7800X3D for my VR gaming needs.
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
To be honest, I lost all interest in the new AMD CPUs because they fucking named the thing "AI" (with zero real-world application).
I'm in the market for a new PC next month and I'm gonna get the 7800X3D for my VR gaming needs.
I absolutely hate having to scroll past garbage AI answers I don't care to see, nor would I trust
I'll use it more when its has a proven reliable use.
AI is a neat toy... but that's all it is. It's horrible at almost every real-world application it's been forced into, and that's before you wander into the whole shifting minefield of ethical concerns or consider how wildly untrustworthy they are.
I was at the optometrist recently and saw a poser for some lenses (transitions) that somehow had "AI"....I was like WTF how / why / do you need to carry a small supercomputer around with you as well.
Who would have guessed so?
We're seeing a bunch of promises made when LLM were the novel hot shit. Now that we've plateaued on how useful they are to the average consumer every AI product is just a beta test that will drop support as soon as something newer and shinier comes along.
To me AI helps me bang out small functions and classes for personal projects and act as a Google alternative for mundane stuff.
Other than that any product that uses it is no different than a digital assistant asking chat gpt to do things. Or at least that seems like the perception from a consumer level.
Besides it's bad enough I probably use a homes energy trying to make failing programming demos much less ordering pizza from my watch or whatever.
I hate the feeling that they are continuing to dump real humans who can communicate and respond to issues outside of the rigid framework when it comes to support. AI is also only as good as its data and design. It feels like someone built a self driving car, stuck it on a freshly paved and painted highway and decided it was good to go. Then you take it on an old rural road and end up hitting a tree.