• @ohshittheyknow@lemmynsfw.com
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    692 months ago

    AI is a tool, like a hammer. Useful when used for its purpose. Unfortunately every tech company under the sun is using it for the wrong fucking thing. I don’t need AI in my operating system or my browser or my search engine. Just let it work on protein folding, chemical synthesis and other more useful applications. Honestly can’t wait for the AI hype to calm the fuck down.

    • @Tattorack@lemmy.world
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      192 months ago

      The only way it’s going to die down is if it gets replaced with the next tech bro buzzword.

      The previous one was “smart”, and it stuck around for a very long time.

    • yeehaw
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      82 months ago

      Preach it. I have been so sick of AI hype and rolling my eyes any time a business advertises it, and in some cases moving on. I don’t care about your glorified chat bot or search engine.

      • @bitjunkie@lemmy.world
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        12 months ago

        AI is the buzzword for a search engine that actually fucking works, something we used to have that gradually got enshittified out of existence

    • Dr. Moose
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      32 months ago

      It’ll balance out. I’m old enough to remember many web tech being this way from flash, to Bluetooth to Cloud.

    • @Petter1@lemm.ee
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      12 months ago

      It works pretty well as research/learn tool at my job… I learned a lot very fast using AI as a tool in my browser.

  • Jesus
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    362 months ago

    My guess is that, given Lemmy’s software developer demographic, I’m not the only person here who is close to this space and these players.

    From what I’m seeing in my day to day work, MS is still aggressively dedicated to AI internally.

    • @jj4211@lemmy.world
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      152 months ago

      That’s compatible with a lack of faith in profitable growth opportunity.

      So far they have gone big with what I’d characterize as more evolutionary enhancements to tech. While that may find some acceptance, it’s not worth quite enough to pay off the capital investment in this generation of compute. If they overinvest and hope to eventually recoup by not upgrading, they are at severe risk of being superseded by another company that saved some expenditure to have a more modest, but more up to date compute infrastructure.

      Another possibility is that they predicted a huge boom of a other companies spending on Azure hosting for AI stuff, and they are predicting those companies won’t have the growth either.

    • Optional
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      52 months ago

      I am sure the internal stakeholders of Micro$oft’s AI strategies will be the very last to know. Probably as they are instructed to clean out their desks.

      • Jesus
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        32 months ago

        There are a few of us here who are closer to Satya‘s strategic roadmap than you might think.

        • Optional
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          22 months ago

          I’m sure but they’re not going to hedge on a roadmap. Roadmaps are aways full-steam-ahead.

    • Alex
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      42 months ago

      Context is king which is why even the biggest models get tied in knots when I try them on my niche coding problems. I’ve been playing a bit with NotebookLM which promises to be interesting with enough reference material but unfortunately when I tried to add the Vulcan specs it complained it couldn’t accept them (copyright maybe?).

      We have recently been given clearance to use the Gemini Pro tools with Google office at work. While we are still not using them for code generation I have found the transcription and meeting summary tools very useful and certainly a time saver.

    • @turnip@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      Because investors expect it, whether it generates profit or not. I guess we will see how it changes workflows, or whether people continue to do things like they always have.

  • @shads@lemy.lol
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    282 months ago

    Hmm, not meaning to get my conspiracy hat on here but do we think this could relate to the fact that Microsoft now has a quantum computing chip that they can hype to their investors to show they have the next big thing in the bag?

    AI has served its purpose and is no longer strategically necessary?

    Since they are only spending investors money it doesn’t matter if they burn billions on leading the industry down the wrong path and now they can let it rot on the vine and rake in the next round of funding while the competition scrambles to catch up.

    • Balder
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      12 months ago

      How would that be a conspiracy. If the AI bubble bursts eventually, I’m sure Microsoft won’t want to be among the last ones to leave.

      • @shads@lemy.lol
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        12 months ago

        Had a big thing written out, didn’t like it when I read it back. So keeping it simple, I equivocated to try to deflect some of the potential rough replies from the cultists who have already drunk the Koolaid.

  • @misk@sopuli.xyz
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    192 months ago

    „Microsoft stopped building AI data center infrastructure, therefore Microsoft signals that there’s not enough demand” is a valid point in itself but not enough to merit a blog post that’s this long.

    I’m getting an impression that minor fame and success went into Ed Zitron’s head because he now brags about those word counts and other pretentious shit on BlueSky constantly.

    • bobalot
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      12 months ago

      Really? That’s disappointing.

      I was hoping for more credible people to be pointing out the wank that is generative AI.

      • Optional
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        92 months ago

        I don’t buy that. The article covers a lot more than the cancellation of data center leases.

        It also talks about Stargate, SoftBank, and a lot of other related elements that point to the original premise as the correct one - M$ is aware they’re not going to get the bike for Christmas.

      • @misk@sopuli.xyz
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        2 months ago

        Ed Zitron is credible but he’s trying a little bit too much for his own good. My guess is loads of people bought into the hype and are now holding the bags awkwardly and we’re left with smug assholes pointing that out. Takes one to know one ;)

  • @gmtom@lemmy.world
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    132 months ago

    Yeah I mean, when has Microsoft of all companies ever been wring about the future of technology…

    • yeehaw
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      32 months ago

      Hmmm let me just bring this on Internet explorer on my windows phone.

  • @BlameTheAntifa@lemmy.world
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    122 months ago

    There’s no need for huge, expensive datacenters when we can run everything on our own devices. SLMs and local AI is the future.

    • @yarr@feddit.nl
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      52 months ago

      This feels kinda far fetched. It’s like saying “well, we won’t need cars, because we’ll all just have jetpacks that we use to get around.” I totally agree that eventually a useful model will run on a phone. I disagree it’s going to be soon enough to matter to this discussion. To give you some ideas, DeepSeek is a recent model. It’s 671B parameters. Devices like phones are running 7-14B models. So, eventually what you say will be feasible, but we have a ways to go.

      • @BlameTheAntifa@lemmy.world
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        32 months ago

        The difference is that we’ll just be running small, specialized, on-demand models instead of huge, resource-heavy, all-purpose models. It’s already being done. Just look at how Google and Apple are approaching AI on mobile devices. You don’t need a lot of power for that, just plenty of storage.

  • @WhatSay@slrpnk.net
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    62 months ago

    It’s not like Microsoft has their finger on the pulse of technology advancement, they only got involved with AI to seem relevant, and now it’s not worth doing anymore.

    • Balder
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      52 months ago

      I was thinking this. Microsoft got some participation on OpenAI and has been paying them with cheap credits to run on their data centers. I guess they’re starting to worry that once the house of cards collapse, they’ll be the ones to pick up the pieces for any over-investment.

  • @RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    62 months ago

    Maybe thanks to tariffs the importation of components made overseas will become cost prohibitive vs any expected potential gains from further development of LLM/AI. Or, perhaps in addition, an expected economic downturn has caused them to re-evaluate large investments in the immediate future. Or maybe they think AI is dumb.

  • @Petter1@lemm.ee
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    22 months ago

    I see it more like they are confident to get running LLMs less resource intensive 🤔