The Untold Story of Scott Wu, CEO of Devin AI

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  • Опубликовано: 17 мар 2024
  • This is Scott Wu, founder & CEO of Cognition Labs which created Devin AI.
    #ai #coding #devin #devinai #cognitionlabs #agi #singularity #ainews #softwareengineer #maths
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Комментарии • 815

  • @hanshalili174
    @hanshalili174 2 месяца назад +1328

    Plot Twist: Devin is just Scott Wu calculating and programming everything for you hella fast

    • @theAIsearch
      @theAIsearch  2 месяца назад +42

      🤯

    • @dineshbs444
      @dineshbs444 2 месяца назад +42

      You would be surprised to know all 10 people in their team are IOI gold medalists and there are people who are faster and smarter than him in the team.

    • @prasanjeetnayak8253
      @prasanjeetnayak8253 2 месяца назад

      I know this is out of context but do hardware engineers face ageism like software engineers​@@dineshbs444

    • @saurabhverma7366
      @saurabhverma7366 2 месяца назад

      😁😁😁

    • @tanmaysingha1196
      @tanmaysingha1196 2 месяца назад +1

      yeh funny..pls laugh

  • @AnshuKumar-oj8ww
    @AnshuKumar-oj8ww 2 месяца назад +402

    1. a^2-b^2 = (a+b)*(a-b) = 500*10
    2. here 2 letters must be arranged in an ordered way in 5 distinct positions so 5c2(for 1 and 2) = 10. For the remaining 3 positions - 3 different letters are there so 3*2*1
    In total =. 10*3*2*1 = 60
    3. MATHLETE is repeating and so every 8th letter will end in E(word's ending) so 2008 which is a multiple of 8 will end in E. Then 2009 and 2010 letters are M and A respectively.

    • @bat2906
      @bat2906 2 месяца назад +23

      Underrated comment

    • @ZoroasterIII
      @ZoroasterIII 2 месяца назад +50

      He was 12 and in front of a large crowd. You are behind your computer at home.

    • @Vape55
      @Vape55 2 месяца назад

      haha

    • @AnshuKumar-oj8ww
      @AnshuKumar-oj8ww 2 месяца назад +137

      @@ZoroasterIIII'd like to clarify that I'm not drawing any comparison to anyone. I simply want to provide some information to those who might still be looking for a solution. From my experience with YT, I've noticed that people can either be envious or encouraging. I'm confident you know which category you belong to. For your information, I've successfully cleared six national-level exams.

    • @tusharr1411
      @tusharr1411 2 месяца назад +44

      2nd one is more simple than that....
      total numbers =5! = 120
      so half have 1 to the left of 2 and other half have to the right
      so answer is 120/2 = 60

  • @andreivictor3323
    @andreivictor3323 2 месяца назад +743

    I work as a software engineer for 10 years, but if I would meet this guy, I would tell him that I work as an Uber driver in order to avoid the questions that he might ask regarding my knowledge compared to his.

  • @newone5262
    @newone5262 2 месяца назад +592

    Imagine having this guy as a competitor for a job position.

    • @ghhdgjjfjjggj
      @ghhdgjjfjjggj 2 месяца назад +68

      Oh, but we do have him as a competitor now. With his new invention he is gonna wipe out 50% of the workforce.

    • @newone5262
      @newone5262 2 месяца назад +14

      @@ghhdgjjfjjggj learn welding or any job that involves working with high voltages is the key, at least for 10 more years. It will take a long time to substitute all the manual labor

    • @000Emir
      @000Emir 2 месяца назад +2

      Answer is 0(Zero)

    • @wasimsayyad9908
      @wasimsayyad9908 2 месяца назад +5

      You are still thing about job 😢

    • @jodorwot6979
      @jodorwot6979 2 месяца назад

      @@newone5262 can i choose mechanical or electrical ?

  • @sudhanvasamaga2360
    @sudhanvasamaga2360 2 месяца назад +690

    Guys judging him based on this math quiz being easy,
    1.he was 12 years old
    2.he is a legendary grandmaster in codeforces(a position u can never attain with ur slow mind if u coded 3 lifes)

    • @algospace9360
      @algospace9360 2 месяца назад +14

      True

    • @ckmichael8
      @ckmichael8 2 месяца назад

      in chinese olympaid math curriculum that rule is probably taught at like age of 10-11, and there are at least of tens lf thousands of chinese kids being taught that rule as part of their olympaid math training each year, it is just not impressive at all tbh.
      Despite being a codeforces god, he, his team and his AI software engineer failed to properly program their demo site sucb that the reddit folks could easily launch denial of wallet attacks on their upload endpoint, and in multiple occasions you cannot even register for the preview with some server errpr messages. Their AI may seems impressive at the surface but is hardly useful for any real-life software engineering usage, even the demo they coded out is buggy. It is nothing more than a GitHub Copilot with some sugars

    • @amraouza4937
      @amraouza4937 2 месяца назад +30

      @@algospace9360 Your comment is absolutely ridiculous ... but i still agree, for a 12 year old he was ahead

    • @CuongNguyen-gu9fl
      @CuongNguyen-gu9fl 2 месяца назад +45

      @@amraouza4937 What this video proves is that he had a "very strong" guidance when he was a child.

    • @AK-hf3pf
      @AK-hf3pf 2 месяца назад

      judging how good someone is by their codeforces performance is BS.
      Its like how you don't judge the skill of a mathematician by the number of olympiads he was won, but rather by the quality of his papers.
      And Devin AI is vaporware hype scam, and no I'm not a coder, just a mathematician.
      Codeforces is a good tool for IYI exam takers -- nntaleb

  • @sarniva
    @sarniva 2 месяца назад +383

    Neal Wu ( brother of scoot wu) is also global rank 1 in leetcode 😮

    • @theAIsearch
      @theAIsearch  2 месяца назад +44

      dayum

    • @bishalpaul18
      @bishalpaul18 2 месяца назад +12

      And also lgm in cf

    • @jpdupont25
      @jpdupont25 2 месяца назад +16

      What are his parents doing?

    • @wayne8863
      @wayne8863 2 месяца назад +29

      @@jpdupont25 Embodied AGI development before their children were born.

    • @Zibonnn
      @Zibonnn 2 месяца назад +51

      We need some step-by-step tutorials from their parents.

  • @sameerpurwar4836
    @sameerpurwar4836 2 месяца назад +186

    All three questions are easy, but his maths, calculation and english reading abilities are god level. He is a genius.

    • @ZoroasterIII
      @ZoroasterIII 2 месяца назад +5

      He was 12

    • @sameerpurwar4836
      @sameerpurwar4836 2 месяца назад +10

      In india also at 15 you could do these question, and there are many who can do it at 12, and if you are motivated enough you could do it, though it might not be easy for everyone.

    • @piratesaman
      @piratesaman 2 месяца назад

      hmm@@sameerpurwar4836

    • @Hari.2006
      @Hari.2006 2 месяца назад +2

      they were actually easy

    • @jinfin221
      @jinfin221 2 месяца назад +7

      ​@@sameerpurwar4836lol no you can't. 30% of 15 year Olds in India can't even form a sentence lmao

  • @sylvesterjonas9141
    @sylvesterjonas9141 2 месяца назад +787

    Man it is a difference of two squares, nothing genius about computing 255²-245² in your head it is just (255-245)(255+245).

    • @theAIsearch
      @theAIsearch  2 месяца назад +160

      i didn't know this rule 🤦‍♂️

    • @NihongoWakannai
      @NihongoWakannai 2 месяца назад +237

      ​@@theAIsearch Arithmetic tests like this are always just about memorizing certain rules and tricks.

    • @basilbrush7878
      @basilbrush7878 2 месяца назад +41

      It's obviously the difference of two squares, but most of us would need to write it down, though

    • @Data2watch
      @Data2watch 2 месяца назад

      @@basilbrush7878255-245 = 10 and 245+255 = 500 Ie. 250+250 if you just give 5 from 255 to 245 making both 250 and 250 , so the answer is 500*10 = 5000 ,ok

    • @ArunRajOnline
      @ArunRajOnline 2 месяца назад +54

      ​@@theAIsearchGo to school man..

  • @holetarget4925
    @holetarget4925 2 месяца назад +16

    Scott is the first MVP of Devin. he is just behind the chatbot to answer your questions

  • @curious_one1156
    @curious_one1156 2 месяца назад +42

    It was important for him to be introduced in the promo video as "human", since the world frequently forgets that.

  • @hsiaowanglin9782
    @hsiaowanglin9782 2 месяца назад +4

    What a genius team, with so many outstanding youth, you may do many thing change the world. Thanks for sharing your story.

  • @ericmundia
    @ericmundia 2 месяца назад +66

    When he says it's a really hard problem, I believe him!

    • @hiddencuber2250
      @hiddencuber2250 2 месяца назад +6

      Nope. If he says it's a problem, you can't solve it😊

    • @2REACTION4U
      @2REACTION4U 2 месяца назад

      idk

    • @2REACTION4U
      @2REACTION4U 2 месяца назад

      @@hiddencuber2250u know Eric or isit ur random general stats altho this already specomunityy

  • @ElluscientTechnologySolutions
    @ElluscientTechnologySolutions 2 месяца назад +12

    Scott Wu - Sounds like an incredibly bright man as well as his brother! Very impressive history of him!

  • @joe7843
    @joe7843 2 месяца назад +19

    Great video! I was looking for the background of the team and you did all the work for me,thanks a lot, I click on the subscribe button too

  • @user-pe1ny7wl9o
    @user-pe1ny7wl9o 2 месяца назад +4

    00:04 Scott Wu is the CEO of Devin AI revolutionizing the tech industry
    02:26 Devon AI can benchmark performance and build projects like a human software engineer
    04:43 Scott Wu is a math prodigy and coding genius
    06:57 Scott Wu founded Devin AI after working on Lunch Club and Cognition Labs.
    09:16 Scott Wu and his team are world-class in math, statistics, and coding.
    11:24 Devin AI is a highly advanced coding agent
    13:33 Devon AI surpasses in computing power compared to other platforms
    15:39 Devon AI automates tasks for freelance software engineers
    17:46 Advancements in AI technologies like OS co-pilot and Mesa are improving task completion capabilities.
    19:39 AI agents revolutionizing automation of tasks
    21:24 Stay tuned for more content

  • @skateplayzhindigaming5177
    @skateplayzhindigaming5177 2 месяца назад +15

    1:36 For this question, we do this:
    The pattern is:
    MATHLETEMATHLETEMATHLETE...
    we have to find the 2010th position.
    So, the number of letters in the word 'MATHLETE' = 8
    When we divide 2010 by 8
    The remainder we get is 2 (2010-8*251)
    So, the 2nd letter in the word 'MATHLETE' is the correct answer (which is A).

    • @armin3057
      @armin3057 Месяц назад +1

      sure but his speed...

    • @sergiomanuel2206
      @sergiomanuel2206 19 дней назад

      The answer is "A":
      2010th letter is in the position 2009. 2009mod8=1
      0->M ->0mod8=0
      1->A -> 1mod8=1
      2->T -> 2mod8=2
      You have to start counting from 0

  • @codelinx
    @codelinx 2 месяца назад +23

    This is honestly wild to see something like this come to fruition

  • @piotrek7633
    @piotrek7633 2 месяца назад +76

    Imagine what happens after they put captcha everywhere, poor devin

    • @d.sharon4654
      @d.sharon4654 2 месяца назад +4

      LOL! great idea actually

    • @raffiihzazuhairnawan2091
      @raffiihzazuhairnawan2091 2 месяца назад +2

      Well, then it will simply become assisted tool instead of unassisted. The human only needs to solve the captcha and devin handles the rest 😅

    • @umutc2609
      @umutc2609 Месяц назад

      Rest assured it will solve the captchas faster than us 😁

  • @nagamanjunath2102
    @nagamanjunath2102 2 месяца назад +1

    This is truly revolutionary. Over multiple iterations of the product it’s ought to get scarily good.

  • @karenmkrtumyan6902
    @karenmkrtumyan6902 2 месяца назад +68

    IOI has nothing to do with statistics. That was just the statistics page of IOI website

    • @theAIsearch
      @theAIsearch  2 месяца назад +6

      Thanks for clarifying!

    • @pratikshetty6919
      @pratikshetty6919 2 месяца назад +1

      ya right

    • @abdennacerlachiheb319
      @abdennacerlachiheb319 2 месяца назад

      Yeah, it's problem-solving using algorithms

    • @riittap9121
      @riittap9121 2 месяца назад

      IOI is basically a programming competition, where you solve mathematical problems with efficient algorithms. The solutions are automatically tested and there's a time limit you have to pass. Many participants compete both in IOI and IMO (International Mathematical Olympiad).

    • @abdennacerlachiheb319
      @abdennacerlachiheb319 2 месяца назад

      @@riittap9121 IOI is not exclusively math problems, it can also be graph, tree, dynamic programming, string ...

  • @themeniacs7376
    @themeniacs7376 2 месяца назад +13

    I mean they didn't build a llm, i think they have stitched a software engineer workflow maybe on top of gpt4 model . And maybe worked extensively on fine tunning it

    • @theAIsearch
      @theAIsearch  2 месяца назад +3

      agree. it's likely a wrapper on top of an existing llm, but designed to automate coding and debugging

  • @cocadoodledoo6346
    @cocadoodledoo6346 2 месяца назад +14

    2nd question, after 16 letters the characters starts to repeat, so 2010/16 is 125.625, now skip the .625 part and focus on 125, 16*125 is 2000, 2010-2000 = 10, the 16 characters can perfectly repeat 125 times and they make 2000 characters in total, so now the only thing you've to do is check which character is in or will come in the 10th position, which is A. 😅
    Okay I overlooked, they're repeating after 8th characters so yeah you can still do it, 2010/8 = 251.25, 251*8= 2008, 2010-2008= 2, and you get A.

    • @nameistverborgen
      @nameistverborgen 2 месяца назад +4

      It is much easier ... 2010 % 8

    • @Chillgaming_1
      @Chillgaming_1 2 месяца назад +1

      yep excatly 2010/8 = 2008 + 2 = 2010 which is the second letter ''A''
      @@nameistverborgen

    • @nimishhhhhh2919
      @nimishhhhhh2919 Месяц назад

      What does % do? Like percentage?​@@nameistverborgen

    • @andoan8505
      @andoan8505 Месяц назад

      @@nimishhhhhh2919 remainder

    • @nimishhhhhh2919
      @nimishhhhhh2919 Месяц назад

      @@andoan8505 got it

  • @sidnath7336
    @sidnath7336 2 месяца назад +35

    The digits question is a nice entry level question.
    Requires knowing that 1 followed by a 2 can be achieved 10 ways and for each way, you can order 435 in 6 ways, so 6x10=60.

    • @SimKieu
      @SimKieu 2 месяца назад +11

      or 5!/2

    • @benzz69
      @benzz69 2 месяца назад +2

      Can ya explain ?? Please

    • @sidnath7336
      @sidnath7336 2 месяца назад +2

      @@SimKieu This is also a useful method by first asking 'how many ways can we order the 5 digits' i.e. 5! and then we need to remove any instance when 2 appears before 1 i.e. 1/2 the time because of symmetry.

    • @benzz69
      @benzz69 2 месяца назад

      @@sidnath7336 I got that but I did not get what you said .... , I understood that 435 part but I didn’t get how you know that there are 10 ways to write 1 followed by 2

    • @patmaloyan620
      @patmaloyan620 2 месяца назад +1

      ​​@@benzz69once u get ur way with the 3 other numbers (ex: 354), now consider the ways I can insert my one and two such that the one is left of 2. The key here, is realizing that is the same problem as picking two spots in these three digits (/3/5/4/, each / denoting spot). Now to pick two of these /'s, the problem is just 5 choose 2 = 10 (if you don't know what 5 choose 2 means, look it up. It's good to know, and cool imo.)

  • @MahdiRedwan
    @MahdiRedwan 2 месяца назад +1

    He knows what the formulas are, and how to apply them efficiently.

  • @michaelmcwhirter
    @michaelmcwhirter 2 месяца назад +2

    Man this video is great! 🔥Where did you get the idea to make it and how did you funnel all the research you gathered to create something so educational?

  • @felipelopes3171
    @felipelopes3171 2 месяца назад +61

    First question: 255^2-245^2=(255-245)(255+245)=10*500=5000
    Second question:
    There are 5!=120 permutations of numbers, in half of them 1 is to the left of 2, so it's 60.
    Third question:
    Compute the remainder of 2010 when divided by 8. Since 1000=8*125, you can look only at the last three digits, so it's the remainder of 10 by 8, which is 2. The second letter in mathlete is a.
    Can I found an AI company now?
    In any case, this is standard math olympiad prep. Other people who also knew this are Sam Bankman-Fried and Caroline Ellison.

    • @theAIsearch
      @theAIsearch  2 месяца назад +8

      In any case, this is standard math olympiad prep. Other people who also knew this are Sam Bankman-Fried and Caroline Ellison.

    • @theAIsearch
      @theAIsearch  2 месяца назад +3

      Can I found an AI company now?

    • @felipelopes3171
      @felipelopes3171 2 месяца назад

      @@theAIsearch well, let's just say that his product speaks for itself :)

    • @adrianlouis2108
      @adrianlouis2108 2 месяца назад +9

      @@theAIsearch Man you can also acquire this skill just go for JEE advance...

    • @sudhanvasamaga2360
      @sudhanvasamaga2360 2 месяца назад +2

      But uk what Sam bankman is not? A legendary grandmaster at competitive programming

  • @muhammadaqeel1134
    @muhammadaqeel1134 Месяц назад +9

    Bro just lied on the resume from very first day.

  • @Charles-Darwin
    @Charles-Darwin 2 месяца назад +8

    Give a link where it specifies architecture - is it truly "AI" itself or is this just a slew of api calls, a lovely UI wrapper, and some sort of scheduler?

    • @BillAnt
      @BillAnt 2 месяца назад +9

      Whatever it is, you throw a link at it with some outline of your project, and it spits out a perfectly debugged output.
      IMO this is historic, it's like the start of gold mining in the 1800's, it will only get better from now on.

  • @planetmuskvlog3047
    @planetmuskvlog3047 2 месяца назад +1

    It’s more than math. Looking at Scott’s body language, he was speed reading the questions from the moment the question appeared and was solving for it before the host even began reading the question.

  • @DK-ox7ze
    @DK-ox7ze 2 месяца назад +32

    He is definitely very smart but regarding the quiz questions shown in the beginning, I am certain that he had practiced similar questions before the actual event. That's why he was able to answer without the question finishing because he knew what the question was from his previous practice.

    • @t.yop9
      @t.yop9 2 месяца назад +8

      Bro, you can practice 'similar' problems for a year. But he read the question, understood the question, found the solution (let's say he recalled a similar question', then did the calculation...all in less time than it took the examiner to read the first sentence of the question.

    • @DK-ox7ze
      @DK-ox7ze 2 месяца назад +3

      @@t.yop9 Or maybe he had seen and solved that exact question while practicing for the exam.

    • @magicalhippo
      @magicalhippo 2 месяца назад +9

      I've been to one of those competitions (just state not national level) and you can't know the questions beforehand because they're new, and at the national level they're really just good at speed reading the questions and extracting what they need. Although it is possible they've seen a similar type question somewhere else before but it's not guaranteed.

    • @DK-ox7ze
      @DK-ox7ze 2 месяца назад +1

      @@magicalhippo There's a also a possibility that it has some pattern which doesn't require solving the entire question. And maybe he used that to solve the question. Though that's still impressive, but not like actually finding the square of both numbers and then subtracting.

    • @ericmarsbars
      @ericmarsbars 2 месяца назад +6

      @@DK-ox7ze you are really just looking for anything you can say to downplay this guys intelligence are you, what were you doing at 12?

  • @wtcbd01
    @wtcbd01 2 месяца назад +10

    Good video and information. Definitely a company to watch

  • @teamgostat1457
    @teamgostat1457 2 месяца назад +4

    Thank for this video and the insights into the team behind the project. Giving some human insight into this god like technology helped me get a handle on it. As for Scott - wow!

  • @shmasshah
    @shmasshah Месяц назад +8

    anyone here after finding out Devin video was faked

  • @MayankXOR
    @MayankXOR 2 месяца назад +12

    It's really admirable how Scott is able to solve those questions at a very young age in front of a crowd, He is just extraordinary. But when you think about it, the questions are not really at a very brilliant level. For instance,
    1. It's literally a difference of squares and the very fundamental identity a²-b²=(a-b)(a+b) can be used, So 255²-245²=(255-245)(255+245)=5000.
    2. This one is a pretty classical question in permutations and combinations classes. If 1 is to the left of 2, Then there are 4 places 1 can be i.e. 1----, -1---, --1--, ---1-. Similarly 2 can be placed in 10 total places. The other numbers can be arranged anywhere resulting in 10*3!=10*6=60
    3. The word 'MATHLETE' has 8 letters and 'A' is at the 2nd position, that means 'A' will also occur at every position of the form (8k+2) where 'k' is a whole number. Since 2010(mod8) = 2, i.e, 2010 can be represented as 8k+2 for some integer 'k', you know the position 2010 must contain 'A'. Any number 'x' with the property x(mod8) = 2 will possess the letter 'A'
    Now, my argument is that while Scott is indeed a CS and Math prodigy, the questions proposed in the competition are not really the level they should be. Anyone with even 10 hours of practice can ace these questions in seconds. They feel really complex if you don't have a strong grasp over the subject but for someone who has been given this training at a very early stage in life, these questions are a piece of cake. I bet if this was a Chinese or Indian test, he would probably not get the fastest answer.
    For instance when I heard about Scott getting the questions blazingly fast, I tried to attempt them myself without having any idea what the questions were and I was able to get the answers nearly as fast as Wu(I was about 4-5 seconds slower than Scott because ofcourse I'm not a prodigy and I'm 17).
    It's really harsh to see Scott being known as the guy who solved the math competition questions while he should be known for his Google kickstart participation and others contributions which are way more appreciable than those 3 questions.

    • @theAIsearch
      @theAIsearch  Месяц назад

      🤯

    • @pakkateluguikkada
      @pakkateluguikkada Месяц назад +2

      Woah dude, Indians and Chinese

    • @qaz3433
      @qaz3433 Месяц назад +1

      "Anyone with even 10 hours of practice can ace these questions in seconds" but then you say "They feel really complex if you don't have a strong grasp over the subject..." So which one is it? 10 hours or a lifetime?😂

    • @MayankXOR
      @MayankXOR Месяц назад

      @@qaz3433When I said "strong grasp over the subject", I was not referring to the question practice, but having the "Theory" cleared in mind. I hope you know that there is a difference between "Practice" and "Strong grasp".

    • @qaz3433
      @qaz3433 Месяц назад

      @@MayankXOR In that cas how would someone with 10 hours of practice ace these questions in seconds if they wouldn't know what questions are going to come up? So therefore only if you have a strong grasp ie life time. So, If you are fed this style of education as a child like you do in China you start noticing patterns. So unless you meant to say that if you were around this education your whole life AND had 10 hours of practice you could ace these questions in seconds then the questions are probably not as easy as you say and require a strong background.

  • @basiliskdoor
    @basiliskdoor Месяц назад

    Holy shit this whole story is crazy, not that he good at math and stuff, but he can gather so many top level thinker into one space is mindboggling. I can't believe all people on his team is crazy ass people.
    Anyways i like your style of video, definitely subscribing

  • @UpnDown245
    @UpnDown245 2 месяца назад

    Brilliant milestone and a great video

  • @mrgomelonsolaris
    @mrgomelonsolaris 2 месяца назад +10

    Not a Harvard dropout, a Harvard skipper.

  • @bprmel
    @bprmel Месяц назад +1

    Really good..inspiring the young 👬 Tech entrepreneurs. I am sure Devin AI will be success

  • @madeinhvn
    @madeinhvn 2 месяца назад

    Ahh i used to prep for these olympiads in middle school. he is indeed very smart. most of these are kinda easy-ish but still, very impressive. What I think is that cognition labs has marketed their product wonderfully. Because devin is not the first of its kind. there are a lot of such intelligent agents available. this shows the power of marketing.

    • @armin3057
      @armin3057 Месяц назад

      the speed is crazy tho

  • @grantmartin2002
    @grantmartin2002 Месяц назад +1

    For the first question (255^2-245^2), he memorized the difference of squares formula, which states a^2-b^2 = (a-b)(a+b). If you know this, solving is super trivial and anybody can solve this problem in under 10 seconds.

  • @runer007
    @runer007 2 месяца назад +8

    1:15 Very easy! The 8 letter word "MATHLETE" is being repeated. You want to know what letter is number 2010. Then you use the 8 times table. 800 + 800 + 400 = 2000. Then 10 remains, that gives you one MATHLETE, and the beginning two letters of the next MATHLETE: "MA". Thus the answer is "A".

    • @naman.0316
      @naman.0316 2 месяца назад +8

      Math bee competitions are never about the difficulty of math questions (for that, have a look at IMO). All of the questions in math bee-ish competitions are really easy, and the deciding factor almost every time is how fast you can solve that easy question.

    • @CuongNguyen-gu9fl
      @CuongNguyen-gu9fl 2 месяца назад +5

      @@naman.0316 Yeah, which requires a lot of training, less about talent.

  • @billtensus
    @billtensus Месяц назад +1

    I solved it the moment I saw the 0:00 problem. Not lying. I do not know how this took longer than a second to any middle schooler. I LITERALLY, thought he was going to say "easy right", " Now try this harder one."
    $ Same with 0:27 ___6 possibilities for 3,4,5 and (4+3+2+1) such arrangements Ans. 60 Any middle schooler should answer this under 5 seconds.
    $ The easiest 1:14 cycle of 8, remainder of 2010|8 = 2nd position = A i.e. under 2 seconds.
    Love from India 🇮🇳

  • @user-tt3lb1yy6i
    @user-tt3lb1yy6i Месяц назад +1

    The first question and third question he can probably solve on the spot realistically usually a few math tricks, but the second problem I'm almost certain he probably did that problem before and just knew the answer. Or at least a very similar one and then just substituted out the difference.

  • @raool7
    @raool7 2 месяца назад +5

    After building the product, who gone a debug the code base, Devin Itself or human developer

    • @atifkhanthegreat
      @atifkhanthegreat 2 месяца назад

      In the demo it showed, ai encountered error. Then it added a print statement to debug and fix it.

  • @abv-gn2gk
    @abv-gn2gk 2 месяца назад

    thank you for the video!

  • @diveshchowdary2124
    @diveshchowdary2124 2 месяца назад

    And correction IOI is not just statistics, it can contain any programming questions related to real-world modeled into coding problem

  • @mujtabaalam5907
    @mujtabaalam5907 2 месяца назад

    6:06 where is this from?

  • @Anonymous_Utuber
    @Anonymous_Utuber 2 месяца назад

    The 3rd Questions Solutions is:- Just count the letters in the single word MATHLETE which is 8, then divide 2010/8= 251 and the remainder is 2 . Count the letter in that word which is on second position .
    Therefore the answer is "A" which is on 2nd place.........
    But its really fascinating that Scott Wu is able to answer these question very rapidly in there teenage...... Thats why he is founder of Cognition now..:):)

  • @dr.mikeybee
    @dr.mikeybee 2 месяца назад +8

    (255-245 =10) times (255+245 = 500) = 5000. All you need is to know the difference of squares method.

    • @algospace9360
      @algospace9360 2 месяца назад +2

      Oh come on.... Everybody knows it but this guy is a legend

    • @nameistverborgen
      @nameistverborgen 2 месяца назад

      Thanks, I didn't know this

    • @TheAvoong
      @TheAvoong 2 месяца назад

      Folks, it’s not about how to solve this problem at his age. It how fast he answer it and proven over and over of grandmaster level at his early age.

  • @s11-informationatyourservi44
    @s11-informationatyourservi44 2 месяца назад +7

    i’m speechless. incredible

  • @Dineshyadav-pj1ls
    @Dineshyadav-pj1ls 2 месяца назад +4

    I would suggest him to work on fusion reaction to generate cheap energy, that would help human way more than AI.

  • @jojoeverycat7726
    @jojoeverycat7726 2 месяца назад

    Wu is a great genius not easily come across in everyday life. At his and his team calibre, there could be more things they can do together to a full human capacity. I just can't wait to see his god-level calibre. 555

  • @aidan34i56
    @aidan34i56 2 месяца назад +1

    What's your take on those of us with ADHD or learning disabilities going into tech? I was a lackluster HS student and only became quite good at mathematics later in life (I tutor some of it now!) and am considering an IT degree. Would love an honest response!

    • @theAIsearch
      @theAIsearch  2 месяца назад +2

      There are plenty of very successful tech people who have ADHD, so it's definitely not a disadvantage. Imo, it's better to pick a project you're passionate in building, and then learn the tech to build it out, rather than just go to school to learn based on a syllabus. Good luck!

    • @stanchan
      @stanchan 2 месяца назад

      I have ADD, was a college dropout and had a high degree of success in tech. You don’t have to get a degree. You just have to work hard and get opportunities to succeed. Comparing a fine-tuned model implemented in GitHub Copilot is not comparable to what Devin is doing and there doesn’t seem to anything that Devin is doing that is special other then execution and a team of smart people. That doesn’t mean they can create a successful product, but it does set a high expectation for them to succeed. Good luck to the Devin team. OpenAI is doing something similar as they target AGI. 😄

  • @cosmosapien597
    @cosmosapien597 9 дней назад

    In the first question you have to do
    (255-245)×(255+245) = 10×500 = 5000
    In the second, (5×4×3×2)/2 = 60
    In the third, the (remainder of 2010÷8) = 2. And find the letter at that position which is A.

  • @prathampatel1740
    @prathampatel1740 2 месяца назад +1

    i'm ngl those questions where pretty easy, I mean I did them within seconds too (although I read the question a lot slower), and I'm by no means a math genuis, what's more impressive tho is his codeforces rating.

  • @xzns_19376
    @xzns_19376 2 месяца назад +44

    These questions have patterns and chinese parents sent their kids to training camps where these techniques are taught. Kids have to practice these questions repeatedly every day.
    Source: another Chinese guy who went through this BS in early childhood.

    • @iforget6940
      @iforget6940 2 месяца назад

      What's your opinion on it like how your parents thought you if I may ask

    • @mnoquiao
      @mnoquiao 2 месяца назад +2

      blah blah blah blah

    • @mujtabaalam5907
      @mujtabaalam5907 2 месяца назад

      What's the Chinese guy doing now?

    • @CHAKSHU-xl5nt
      @CHAKSHU-xl5nt 2 месяца назад

      🥲🥲🥲

    • @xzns_19376
      @xzns_19376 2 месяца назад +1

      @@mujtabaalam5907 im working remotely from Toronto as a senior dev for a tech startup in the Bay Area.

  • @liquidchair
    @liquidchair 2 месяца назад +1

    Actually, those questions are not hard, but speed of solving them is fascinating.

  • @lesterdelacruz5088
    @lesterdelacruz5088 2 месяца назад +5

    Last time the media hyped about a genius with an amazing startup we had FTX. Just saying…. Scott Wu certainly is a top competitive programmer but this hype seems like the typical pump and dump startup from deep pockets (Oh wait Peter Thiel as investor)

  • @TheHardikupadhyay87
    @TheHardikupadhyay87 Месяц назад

    i asked chatgpt the first question and it says its 18 not 60 .
    and this is the reasoning
    In the arrangement where the digit 1 is to the left of the digit 2, there are indeed more possibilities than initially considered.
    When 1 is in the first position and 2 is in the second position:
    There are 3 remaining digits (3, 4, 5) to be placed in the last three positions, which gives
    3
    !
    3! permutations.
    Total arrangements for this case:
    1
    ×
    1
    ×
    3
    !
    1×1×3! =
    6
    6.
    When 1 is in the first position and 2 is in the third position:
    Again, there are 3 remaining digits (3, 4, 5) to be placed in the last three positions, resulting in
    3
    !
    3! permutations.
    Total arrangements for this case:
    1
    ×
    1
    ×
    3
    !
    1×1×3! =
    6
    6.
    When 1 is in the first position and 2 is in the fourth position:
    Once more, there are 3 remaining digits (3, 4, 5) to be placed in the last three positions, yielding
    3
    !
    3! permutations.
    Total arrangements for this case:
    1
    ×
    1
    ×
    3
    !
    1×1×3! =
    6
    6.
    Adding up the arrangements from each case:
    6
    +
    6
    +
    6
    =
    18
    6+6+6=18
    Upon reevaluation, the total number of such integers where the digit 1 is to the left of the digit 2 is indeed 18, not 60. Thank you for bringing this to my attention.

  • @user-xu6ni2xd8c
    @user-xu6ni2xd8c Месяц назад +1

    First one , ( a+b)( a-b)= a²-b² means
    ( 255+245)(255-245)= 500×10= 5000 .more more practice esy , but he was super intelligent too

  • @bwhit7919
    @bwhit7919 2 месяца назад +8

    The first question is pretty easy if you know the trick. 255^2 - 245^2 = (255+245) * (255 - 245) = 500 * 10 = 5000.

    • @algospace9360
      @algospace9360 2 месяца назад

      Seriously man who doesn't know it 🙃

    • @anupbarua6151
      @anupbarua6151 2 месяца назад +3

      lots of people knows it. but its Scot's calculation speed. also many people won't be able to calculate in the heads(without pen/paper/calculator) even if have long time.

    • @rutesh1902
      @rutesh1902 2 месяца назад +1

      but he didnt even wait for him to say out the 2nd integer bro

    • @anupbarua6151
      @anupbarua6151 2 месяца назад +1

      he needn't wait. he could read the question on big screen, or his personal screen. he can read faster that presenter speaks.

    • @anupbarua6151
      @anupbarua6151 2 месяца назад

      i can do above mentioned calculation in mind in 2-3 minutes. most people in the world won't be able to do so in a whole day. see scot wu is 100-200 times faster than me in this calculation.

  • @TechBishwajit
    @TechBishwajit 2 месяца назад

    Awesome Boss Keep Going...

  • @Code_Note
    @Code_Note 2 месяца назад

    He is a legendary grandmaster in codeforces .

  • @manie.musicale
    @manie.musicale Месяц назад +1

    For the MATHLETE question: 2010/8 (because MATHLETE has 8 letters), 231.25, 1/4 of 8 is 2, so the 2nd letter in MATHLETE = A!

  • @Aaron-hh8nx
    @Aaron-hh8nx 2 месяца назад +10

    He was born brilliant, he has good genetics

  • @G_MellaX
    @G_MellaX Месяц назад

    It's just the beginning. Imagine what this team could do with an AI like Devin. They are creating an instrument for themselves to start making some really cool stuff.

    • @theAIsearch
      @theAIsearch  Месяц назад

      I look forward to the day when I can build a full app just by talking to a team of AI agents

  • @sakshamsharma3156
    @sakshamsharma3156 2 месяца назад +5

    He is legendary grandmaster on codeforces. That's enough as an intro.

  • @miguelmedina821
    @miguelmedina821 2 месяца назад +1

    These are the kind of people we need to run for president…

  • @Da_Fonz
    @Da_Fonz Месяц назад +1

    Scott Wu. Incredible!!

  • @GameReality
    @GameReality 2 месяца назад +1

    If that genius kid now is grown up and have made AI Devin then this is real. I am in the list to Devin

  • @michaelmcwhirter
    @michaelmcwhirter 2 месяца назад +1

    These are some of the greatest comments in the comment section ever haha We are very well seeing the spearheading of the AI revolution happen amongst these conversations 🔥

  • @rickdeckard9810
    @rickdeckard9810 25 дней назад

    The questions are actually from a pool and they're given ahead of time to the students who've memorized them and just waiting to regurgitate the info, it's not actually "on the fly".

  • @bassmans
    @bassmans 2 месяца назад

    Great video!

  • @alfellati
    @alfellati 2 месяца назад +2

    Sh*t I said 50,000, missing by a zero can crash markets and destroy lives. This guy is insanely good.

  • @user-gr3ej6yv4k
    @user-gr3ej6yv4k 2 месяца назад

    GREAT GUY

  • @yashchauhan.
    @yashchauhan. 2 месяца назад

    Greate info, thanks man❤

  • @curious_one1156
    @curious_one1156 2 месяца назад +3

    Neal Wu is his brooo ! That is a plot twist irl !!!!!

  • @shinobi1975
    @shinobi1975 2 месяца назад +1

    Damn. Devin reads the documentation. It's so over for Jr. Devs 😂

  • @jayantbhatt007
    @jayantbhatt007 2 месяца назад

    Now I'm planning to become a farmer :D btw great video dude

  • @mohitjain5552
    @mohitjain5552 Месяц назад +1

    Yeah, math geniuses, this kid is *12* years old, and answered even before the sentence finished. Show some mercy.

  • @JakeRobbins1018
    @JakeRobbins1018 Месяц назад +2

    The questions were honestly not that difficult.
    1. 255^2 - 245^2... come on guys, it's just (a+b)(a-b) = a^2 - b^2 in reverse.
    2. Anybody who has had an INTRODUCTION to P&C will be able to crack it.
    3. MATHLETE MATHLETE MATHLETE is a recurring pattern with 8 letters, so 2010 mod 8 = 2 which means the 2nd character of the pattern ('A'). This was actually the easiest.
    Regarding his speed, it's just a matter of practice. I hate math or mathematicians being unnecessarily glorified, the narrator should have researched a bit to see how simple these questions were. If only people in the comments section knew that they could very easily reach this level too...

  • @rootor1
    @rootor1 2 месяца назад +3

    You didn't even talk about the most interesting of all agent tools that is actually released and working (because Devin an many others are just videos today), pythagora

    • @theAIsearch
      @theAIsearch  2 месяца назад

      you're right, pythagora is also great!

    • @plor1261
      @plor1261 2 месяца назад

      He doesn't have to. It's his youtube channel

  • @ronycb7168
    @ronycb7168 2 месяца назад

    3rd question is 2010 mod 8 which is 2 and A is in the second position

  • @Clown408
    @Clown408 2 месяца назад +1

    Every jee student can solve that second q thats just factorial 5 divide by 2 but thats great that he can solve taht q. At that age

  • @nirmalmanoj
    @nirmalmanoj 2 месяца назад

    @4:38 IOI is not an Olympiad focused on statistics. In simple terms, it involves participants competing to solve programming puzzles. Essentially, participants write code to solve these puzzles, and they earn scores when their solutions run efficiently and correctly on test cases. It is generally considered the second hardest Olympiad after the International Mathematical Olympiad. Regardless, almost all participants at the international level in all top Olympiads (math, informatics, physics, etc.) are incredibly talented people.

    • @nirmalmanoj
      @nirmalmanoj 2 месяца назад

      @ai-tools-search please correct to avoid misinformation.

  • @shashanktiwari4442
    @shashanktiwari4442 2 месяца назад +4

    I believe he had practiced so much that he had already solved those questions before while practicing so he recalled the answers and told instantly..bcoz its literally inhuman to solve it that fast

    • @Aaron-hh8nx
      @Aaron-hh8nx 2 месяца назад +1

      Nah, if you have good genetics you can

    • @peekjhon750
      @peekjhon750 2 месяца назад

      Or, just good genetics

  • @asuphmcourses4464
    @asuphmcourses4464 2 месяца назад +1

    We could solve the first question as 255^2 - 245^2= (250+5)^2-(250-5)^2 and by using binomial rule and sequence it will equal 2×summation of secon tems in binomial whic is 2×2C1×250×5 equal 5000 i know that can be solved by diff between two square but this way is generlized form to solve question if we have power greater than 2
    The third question as the mathlete repeated every 8 letters so 2010/8 =126(1/4) by taking reminder 1/4 and make base equal 8 like 2/8 it will be second letter A

    • @parvizsharifi263
      @parvizsharifi263 Месяц назад

      he did not calculate, he knew from quiz training books the answer to 255^2 - 245^2.. he just answered. Its like 4+4 = 8 , you hardly put brain cells to calculate, you just know from experience its 8

  • @DetroitGamingIndia
    @DetroitGamingIndia Месяц назад

    first one was easy af , a^2-b^2 , 5000 popped in my mind in an instant

  • @user-yu2wr5qf7g
    @user-yu2wr5qf7g Месяц назад +2

    so then why was he cheating (=lying in the given context) in the devin ai video clips?!

  • @AyanaSioux
    @AyanaSioux 2 месяца назад

    The mathlete one wasn't hard, but in that speed, yes.
    You just count how many letters are in mathlete which is 8. So you divide 2010 by 8 to see how many times you can fit that word in 2010 times. But it's not complete, you get a fraction. 2010/8 is 251.25. that means it's only 1/4 through the last word. Because there are 8 letters, 1/4 of the word is the letter A.
    Here's why:
    M .125 (1/8)
    A .25 (2/8)
    T .375 (3/8)
    H 50(4/8)
    L .625(5/8)
    E .75(6/8)
    T .875 (7/8)
    E 1 (8/8)

  • @shanghaitinkar
    @shanghaitinkar 2 месяца назад

    Where is this world heading to..amazing to see in our lifetime in next 10/20 yrs

  • @user-ko4dt5hn5g
    @user-ko4dt5hn5g 2 месяца назад

    So should i continue learning laravel?

  • @qbitsday3438
    @qbitsday3438 2 месяца назад

    Great Information!

  • @Tanmay-xz9vn
    @Tanmay-xz9vn 2 месяца назад +2

    Too good to be true.

  • @andreaskrbyravn855
    @andreaskrbyravn855 2 месяца назад +4

    why are someone with early glasses always good at math

    • @werren894
      @werren894 2 месяца назад +5

      brain damage

  • @Gamez4eveR
    @Gamez4eveR Месяц назад +4

    The perfect template for a scam

  • @toddboothbee1361
    @toddboothbee1361 Месяц назад

    What I like is that the Wus and their partners took off their shoes before entering the workspace.

  • @Davidluo0924
    @Davidluo0924 2 месяца назад +8

    Mod(2010,8)=2 , the second letter is A

    • @theAIsearch
      @theAIsearch  2 месяца назад +2

      i'm dumb and have no idea what's mod()

    • @sachins5784
      @sachins5784 2 месяца назад

      ​@@theAIsearch Divide 2010 with 8 using division and Chek the reminder

    • @samsonbankole3761
      @samsonbankole3761 2 месяца назад

      ​@@theAIsearchof you divide 2010 by 8 repeatedly, you get a remainder of 2. That's what mod means

  • @diveshchowdary2124
    @diveshchowdary2124 2 месяца назад +1

    worry about china in future, in recent years there have been candidates who topped IOI, which is way tougher than 2010s

  • @bereketyisehak5584
    @bereketyisehak5584 2 месяца назад

    1. a^2 - b^2 = (a-b)(a+b)
    2.
    3. 2010%8 = 2. Get the second letter, A.
    But he was 12 so that’s crazy smart