Bill Gates on AI and the rapidly evolving future of computing

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  • Опубликовано: 20 мар 2023
  • Today, we have a special guest joining us on the podcast-Bill Gates! With the rapidly evolving AI landscape, including the release of products like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and the new Bing, it was the perfect time to have Bill join to talk about this unique moment in the history of computing. In this episode, Kevin talks with Bill about the latest in AI research, including the release of GPT-4, how past technology revolutions have led us to where we are today, how AI is evolving his philanthropic work, his love of reading, and so much more!
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Комментарии • 716

  • @carson_tang
    @carson_tang Год назад +330

    1:59 - unveiling of GPT-4.0 outside of OpenAI in August/September 2022
    3:35 - Bill recounts a short history of AI
    5:43 - Bill’s challenge for OpenAI to get his attention
    9:05 - Bill proclaiming GPT-4.0 is a fundamental change despite its shortcomings
    9:43 - GPT-4.0’s shortcomings
    10:18 - shortcoming 1) sense of context
    11:26 - shortcoming 2) math, its greatest weakness
    13:20 - Bill’s belief that the shortcomings are not fundamental and will be fixed
    14:23 - Kevin and Bill talk about examples where GPT-4.0 excels
    18:28 - Bill’s musings on this generation of AI’s impact on society
    23:43 - Kevin’s musings on the bar being lowered to communicate with computers
    25:08 - Bill’s musings on writing computer programs with natural language
    27:27 - AI and the Gates Foundation. AI’s impact on education and health
    33:33 - how Xerox PARC influenced Microsoft in 1979
    38:34 - moving AI compute from servers to self-contained devices
    39:43 - one general AI model or multiple specialized AI models?
    40:43 - scaling up the models to use all known corpuses and synthetic data
    45:35 - what would a young Bill Gates work on in this day and age?
    50:45 - how much does Bill Gates actually read?

    • @VedantinKK
      @VedantinKK Год назад +10

      Thanks. You're the Guvnor.

    • @Meta_humane
      @Meta_humane Год назад +2

      You are a legend 🫡

    • @user-bh4jo3mf1g
      @user-bh4jo3mf1g Год назад

      0:19

    • @Fahim_Faisal
      @Fahim_Faisal Год назад

      Thank you boss.

    • @OA___
      @OA___ Год назад +5

      I bet you made this flawless comment using AI in seconds 😂💪🏻

  • @TheMilwaukieDan
    @TheMilwaukieDan Год назад +19

    THANK YOU. I’m 76 years old and have never considered myself ‘knowledgeable’ with or about technology. I do a lot of writing and still start my stories on paper and ink. One completed I then use Word etc to ‘refine and perfect’ what I wrote on paper. I know… very Old School’.
    That said, last summer when I heard about AI and it’s possible uses, “I was hooked”.
    Because of my quest for information, I happened across the interview. My very first time visiting Microsoft Corp. on line.
    Thank you you two for lighting the flames of learning with in me. I truly believe this will change the world in ways we presently can’t imagine. Thank you again.

  • @toddwmac
    @toddwmac Год назад +158

    Bill, it’s fun to see you get almost “giddy” over this topic. When I began with Microsoft in 1992, I was in the field trying to convince System/36 customers that one day they would want mice and color monitors for GUI PCs. Back then, OLE was magic and the dream of Clippy was almost science fiction. Except for a few practical visionaries like yourself, few could imagine the impact PCs would have across the planet. In that spirit, it’s great to see current Microsoft leaders ushering in yet another fundamentally transformative technology. Thanks for your past and continued contributions.

    • @atypocrat1779
      @atypocrat1779 Год назад +5

      Transformative in the way a spaceship landing on the South Lawn with an alien that speaks all our languages emerging.

  • @jonkraghshow
    @jonkraghshow Год назад +228

    Bill is right. This one is a massive shift. I can't believe how many people in tech continue to point out the shortcomings. The capabilities today are enough and this is only the beginning of real language I/O.

    • @theonlythingihavetosayis9333
      @theonlythingihavetosayis9333 Год назад +15

      That's just called "cope" from them, thinking that their white collar job sector would never get taken over by automation as well

    • @TheHuBBaOfficial
      @TheHuBBaOfficial Год назад +21

      "Look! Here we have a car, it's extremely energy efficient, it's cheap, its using renewable energy sources, it's safe, it's carbon footprint is minimal and it outperforms every old car!" - "Yeah, but it doesnt fly!".

    • @pjorgensen2
      @pjorgensen2 Год назад +11

      I think we’re all just a bit scared. Every job is in danger now, some more than others

    • @jamesl845
      @jamesl845 Год назад +1

      Just wait for the "reveries" as acknowledged in Westworld. The simple things like being able to tell when someone is thinking or considering something while in active conversation.

    • @ummnine6938
      @ummnine6938 Год назад +3

      i like when you said "language i/o", i will be using this now too

  • @lucasjim5584
    @lucasjim5584 Год назад +64

    I had my first computer when I was 13 years old. Broadband internet at 15. Smartphone at 21. Chatgpt at 33. A whole new generation of kids will grow up with all these advances starting from now. For me, all of the mentioned itens were always magic and object of appreciation and wonder. Also, I had to learn a whole set of habilities to work with them -and many more to work without the use of them. For the young people right now, this is all a thing of the past. Everything is truly changed.
    I feel like a person transitioning from an age without radio and electricity to an world of mass media and light bulbs. Only this time everything is happening massively faster.

    • @ODevaneador
      @ODevaneador Год назад +6

      It's happening so fast and I'm not even prepared yet, but I know I must be prepared to handle this new world that is appearing. I'm excited and at the same time really freaked out.

    • @sandponics
      @sandponics Год назад +2

      At about ten years old my eldest son was writing code on a Tandy computer and backing up to audio tape cassettes. Where at that age I was only building crystal set radios.

  • @FriedChairs
    @FriedChairs Год назад +116

    I’ve been using the new Bing chat for a couple of weeks and I want to give props to Microsoft. You’ve not only taken GPT4 (which is already amazing) and released it but you have majorly enhanced it.

    • @brianj7204
      @brianj7204 Год назад +18

      no, the changes balance out, they enhanced it by allowing it to browse the internet, but they restrained it by adding additional rules and guidelines.

    • @eobardrush2112
      @eobardrush2112 Год назад +12

      @@brianj7204 Yeah tbh there is too much restrictions placed that prevents you having a bit more fun with it

    • @vkobevk
      @vkobevk Год назад +2

      oh well i wish, but reality it is gpt4 is not fun like expected, you cant made fun image with, every time the program say fun is not allowed

    • @MuhammadKharismawan
      @MuhammadKharismawan Год назад

      @@eobardrush2112 bing can even actually search itself so its just what internet connected ChatGPT have to abide to, for now.

    • @IdOnThAvEaUsE69
      @IdOnThAvEaUsE69 Год назад +1

      I don't think it's as bad as ChatGPT on NSFW content.

  • @muoity4418
    @muoity4418 Год назад +72

    When I look at the young Bill Gates and look at him now I get emotional. Time spares no one. It's a pity that Steve Jobs won't live to talk to Bill Gates about AI in 2023. Truly a legend.

    • @enduringwave87
      @enduringwave87 Год назад +30

      Get emotional by looking at your aging parents who brough you into this world

    • @ODevaneador
      @ODevaneador Год назад +2

      @@enduringwave87 😅😅😅

    • @olabassey3142
      @olabassey3142 Год назад +6

      he will make Himself young again with technology. save your tears

    • @PatternRecognizer
      @PatternRecognizer Год назад +10

      He's evil

    • @muoity4418
      @muoity4418 Год назад +8

      @@PatternRecognizer evil in your eyes but angel in my eyes . ok

  • @alpacino4857
    @alpacino4857 Год назад +9

    when one talk about writing codes or AI programming then Bill Gates is the right person to talk to, to get better understanding on the subject.
    Kevin Scott is feeling the pressure even now when listening to Bill's suggestions. I think they want to impress Bill about their abilities of progressing AI.
    Now they have the the tree trunk of AI "Ready" and looking at ways to expand the AI branches, talking to Bill to get more info on it, is the best start.
    I am really really really impressed by Bill Gates knowledge even after leaving MS for so many years and not getting involved in technology stuffs, yet when asked about the future of things he can answer them so naturally - like he is born to know these stuffs.

  • @CroncAstronaut
    @CroncAstronaut Год назад +38

    We're living revolutionary times!

    • @vkobevk
      @vkobevk Год назад +2

      @Rr Mangr or just before the nuclear armageddon

    • @LimabeanStudios
      @LimabeanStudios Год назад

      The most that will ever exist

    • @Mike-nf6nf
      @Mike-nf6nf Год назад

      Why? Were the flight logs released?

    • @wr1120
      @wr1120 Год назад +1

      Yeah. I hope we'll survive it.

    • @sandponics
      @sandponics Год назад

      Someone probably said the same thing when the wheel was invented.

  • @haraldgnaf5520
    @haraldgnaf5520 5 месяцев назад +1

    I really really love Bill for how sweet, intelligent and calm he is. And for his fascination towards tech and making this world a better place. Thank you for being alive and for all the projects you are moving!

  • @stephenrodwell
    @stephenrodwell Год назад +3

    Fascinating discussion, thank you! 🙏🏼

  • @FilipVoska
    @FilipVoska Год назад +6

    Which paper are you talking about around 38:00, written by Charles? Can you please give full author name and the paper name?

    • @jfd7cf
      @jfd7cf Год назад

      I'm also interested

    • @matiascova
      @matiascova Год назад

      I support this request! I couldn't find it.

    • @akhilkatpally
      @akhilkatpally Год назад +5

      The Future of Computing: A Perspective on Future Changes in Computing and Some Implications for Education

  • @johnglover4985
    @johnglover4985 Год назад +2

    Thanks Bill and Kevin…. This 87 year old techie started out inside a Univac II and I certainly am thrilled at the possibilities of this natural language breakthrough. It has been and continues to be a great ride…. JohnG

  • @jasonburford1552
    @jasonburford1552 Год назад +5

    Children are the future. Like Bill says the education system is lagging behind. Kids use ChatGPT to write essays and teachers use ChatGPT to mark them. What's the motivation for intelligent kids to stay on in education and learn skills which are now obsolete? Has any thought been given to WHAT children need to be learning right now? I guess we just need to teach our kids to aggressively exploit opportunities and take risks. If your kids are not of that mindset, but have innate gifts in analytical thinking, language , art, music, writing, communicating, they will be unemployed. They will not be able to follow in your footsteps when you die. Use of the word 'mindblowing' just shows that the people driving this have not thought it through.

  • @samwelemmanuel7976
    @samwelemmanuel7976 Год назад +239

    Really quite incredible how Bill Gates has managed to stay so relevant in all these major technological breakthroughs. Reading a lot is the lesson I took from all this.

    • @NBGTFO
      @NBGTFO Год назад +7

      Lol

    • @chevyDboyMike
      @chevyDboyMike Год назад +16

      Or just have more money than you know what to do with, and invest in everything new that pops up.

    • @ndavies8
      @ndavies8 Год назад

      Facts

    • @estevaoscudese
      @estevaoscudese Год назад +1

      Correct, @samwelemanuel7976. You don't get smart, after getting rich; in fact, quite the contrary.

    • @joeremus9039
      @joeremus9039 Год назад +6

      Bill Gates is smart and savvy. He sees that some of the criticism that the neural net paradyme that uses statistical learning is not inherently flawed. This is an exciting time and many benefits will follow.

  • @soul-candy-music
    @soul-candy-music Год назад +6

    As a huge fan of Bing Chat, I have to say, that I'm very, very concerned about your AI Safety Protocol. 1st, you rush out a Beta Test (which performed so poorly that it went mainstream), and then Microsoft fired the AI Safety team soon thereafter. It sets an unfortunate precedent on an otherwise historic moment.

  • @pogo55555
    @pogo55555 Год назад +3

    "It was really a powerful and motivating anecdote that you shared." I'm going to have to remember to use that one on my boss. She will love it.

  • @jaqeul007
    @jaqeul007 24 дня назад

    In 1950, Seymour Cray began working in the computing field when he joined Engineering Research Associates (ERA) in Saint Paul, Minnesota. There, he helped to create the ERA 1103. ERA eventually became part of UNIVAC, and began to be phased out. I live in Eagle River, WI

  • @andDESIGNmagazine
    @andDESIGNmagazine Год назад +4

    Older subtractive methods of assessing achievement (finding out what someone doesn’t know from a tightly limited subsection of knowledge) needs to be replaced with a new system that captures what people have learned (an additive inventory of learning achievement from a much broader spectrum of knowledge).

    • @BillGate-mu5fr
      @BillGate-mu5fr Год назад

      Hello 👋 thanks for your support in my dream and career I’m happy to have you as a fan 🚀

  • @mururoa7024
    @mururoa7024 Год назад +4

    I like CTOs who have 3D printers and lab oscilloscopes in their background, instead of a Lambo or a Matisse.

  • @ChrisBrengel
    @ChrisBrengel Год назад +2

    9:09 this is a fundamental change
    9:39 " ...it's a huge, huge advance."
    21:28 next big change
    33:34 Bill's expression

  • @runer007
    @runer007 Год назад +3

    Great to see Bill talking about cutting edge technology, where he himself plays a part. After all Bill is a geek, he obviously love too breathe these things.

  • @athornton1974
    @athornton1974 Год назад +4

    Does anyone have a link to a copy of the printout he is referencing from PARC with Charles Simonyi?

  • @cmichaelgraham
    @cmichaelgraham Год назад +2

    It is a gift to watch the conversation between you two. I am deeply grateful :)

  • @DivineMisterAdVentures
    @DivineMisterAdVentures Год назад +2

    Kevin - flawless interview. Great energy.
    Q. I want to "model" Bill's executive journey from early days to recently. As an observer-admirer since *Basic* days, I feel the need to complete the circle in my mind. Of course I'll look on my own, but thought I'd ask if you have one you would like to recommend.

    • @henryvenn2077
      @henryvenn2077 Год назад +1

      Freemason bookshelf may be a place to begin

  • @myusrngml
    @myusrngml Год назад +2

    I would have found it useful to hear both participants thoughts, and those in the comments, on reading to learn vs listening to podcasts and watching videos to learn at this point in time? Especially given the latter can be usefully done with the playback speed bumped up therefore allowing you to get through more content in less time. Similarly now with AI being what it is are you learning faster having a very targeted discussion and set of Q&A with it on the subject you want to learn.

  • @Wardoon
    @Wardoon Год назад +9

    Reading 80 books a year is an amazing feat of achievement. I am lucky if I read my one book a month. Would have liked to increase that to two-books a month

    • @sbenkimmie9579
      @sbenkimmie9579 Год назад +4

      reading 1 book well can sometimes be better

    • @Danuxsy
      @Danuxsy Год назад +1

      i also read like one book a month on average but that's enough for me thanks

    • @lidvm
      @lidvm Год назад

      Yep he can afford to read an insane amount of books

    • @2jzandys444
      @2jzandys444 Год назад

      Yeah that's at least 60 pages per day!

    • @sandponics
      @sandponics Год назад +1

      I can't even count the number of science and technology RUclips videos I now watch each week.

  • @YaromyrPlashenko-kf1eq
    @YaromyrPlashenko-kf1eq Год назад +3

    What an amazing person! Both are so smart and inspiring individuals!

  • @DrKevinJJones
    @DrKevinJJones Год назад +2

    This was an excellent conversational interview. Well done!

  • @EdTimTVLive
    @EdTimTVLive Год назад +2

    We are grateful to Bill for bringing Internet to homes with Windows in the early days. Of course I'm old enough to remember using DOS and coding in Basic.

    • @BillGate-mu5fr
      @BillGate-mu5fr Год назад +1

      Hello 👋 thanks for your support in my dream and career I’m happy to have you as a fan 🚀

  • @tobinmccahon3631
    @tobinmccahon3631 Год назад +1

    gpt has has revolutionized my life thanks to bill commercializing it, bill is fast becoming my new hero

  • @letsworksimple
    @letsworksimple Год назад +1

    It’s at least an upgrade to an outdated search engine.
    It feels like we’ve been dyslexic in programming and now you get an answer much closer to what you are looking for and not having to sif through information overload

  • @valkyrie8038
    @valkyrie8038 Год назад +8

    I feel like bill is likely the Nicola Tesla or Benjamin Franklin of our generation and doesn’t get enough credit. He’s brilliant

    • @BillGate-mu5fr
      @BillGate-mu5fr Год назад

      Hello 👋 thanks for your support in my dream and career I’m happy to have you as a fan 🚀

  • @lukewilliamrimmington
    @lukewilliamrimmington Год назад +40

    I have been programming applications with LLM's using C#, etc. I honestly have to say OpenAI and the Microsoft Team have done extremely well in this endevour. The GPT large language models are extremely impressive.

  • @lepned
    @lepned Год назад +19

    This was such an great and insightful episode! I learned so much from Bill and Kevin about AI and its impact on the world. Thank you for sharing this with us!

  • @keneola
    @keneola Год назад +18

    I definitely appreciate this interview and Bill's insight on AI. I wish there was more mentions on the social and security impacts of the technology as those seem to be the hardest problems people at the bleeding edge self-admittedly know very little about (only trumped by how the darn thing actually works). I think the example of calculator's impact on education was a prescient one however like with many things AI, it's growth and impact and speed of deployment makes its advent uniquely different. It doesn't take incredible foresight to predict the opportunities for it to be misused or have its applications have wide-reaching unintended consequences. In very optimistic conversations like this, it's critical to always serve it with the largest amount of salt possible to keep the hard unsolved issues regarding social impact at the forefront.

    • @Marmots4reFun
      @Marmots4reFun Год назад +1

      Agree, may enjoy Walter Issacson, Eric Schmitt discussion on Annapour channel.

  • @vijaykay9984
    @vijaykay9984 Год назад +2

    Simply awesome discussion!

  • @owurakuotchere-darko9392
    @owurakuotchere-darko9392 Год назад +9

    When Bill speaks on tech I want to listen.

  • @conw_y
    @conw_y Год назад +1

    Super high quality interview - Gates seems to be well informed. Thanks!

  • @marimb3402
    @marimb3402 Год назад +5

    Hi Bill - Given your aha moment with GPT-4, isn’t it time to prioritize AI Safety & Alignment Research within the Gates Foundation’s initiatives?
    As you’ve masterfully pointed out, the potential of AI to transform our world is immense. If we get it right, the upside for humanity is boundless. Unfortunately, the downside if we get it wrong is also boundless.
    In the coming years, with AI we may witness a modern-day Trinity Test, but with the probability of an existential disaster far surpassing that of the Manhattan Project.
    You have a history of successfully identifying and addressing the most consequential and neglected cause of our time. In my opinion, you did exactly that 20 years ago in global health, and your continued work there has been nothing short of inspiring.

    • @BillGate-mu5fr
      @BillGate-mu5fr Год назад

      Hello 👋 thanks for your support in my dream and career I’m happy to have you as a fan 🚀

  • @EpicSlug
    @EpicSlug Год назад +3

    It's much easier to be relaxed about the impacts of AI when you're already incredibly rich and don't need to worry about it disrupting your career and family life.

  • @auwkeung
    @auwkeung Год назад +8

    It's great that Bill Gates could now set aside his ego and appreciate what other companies have done thru out the tech journey along with his own contribution to all these development milestones. Always insightful and wise thoughts.

  • @joseph-jg2ie
    @joseph-jg2ie Год назад +4

    Kevin, I loved the authenticity of this conversation, you’re great. Thanks!

  • @Bransor
    @Bransor Год назад +2

    Great interview. Thank you for posting it..

  • @ateeqkhan66
    @ateeqkhan66 Год назад +2

    Excellent talk Kevin and Bill. Seems like back to the 80s for the maestro.

  • @9madness9
    @9madness9 Год назад +2

    Now tools like Wolfram addon with chatgpt wonder what is next on Bills list of things to tick off. Like the idea of tools add on for each profession to specialise the output to make chatgpt an auto tool to increase company output, thinking Naval archecture with all the fluid dynamic and hull designs testing.

  • @monkcoder7580
    @monkcoder7580 Год назад +8

    I wonder how generative AI can be used in healthcare instead of replacing doctors with automation if we use it to minimise the human error so that generative AI can build a deep real time knowledge representation and it can increase doctor's productivity and people from remote areas globally can access to better health care facilities with the help of generative AI and also the segment of generative AI and 3d printing seems to be fascinating it seems like AI printing itself❤❤

    • @ovum
      @ovum Год назад +3

      Given GPT-4 is multi-modal (meaning it can "see" too), visual diagnosis will take several great leaps ahead.

    • @jk35260
      @jk35260 Год назад +1

      There are really many use case and in some cases the technology is already ready. For example, Microsoft has AI copilot for Teams. Doctors can use this feature to record their interaction with their patients. So all of a sudden, people do not need to struggle with reading doctors handwriting and doctors no longer need to manually record their patient's medical report. But AI can go beyond this function, they can provide suggestion for diagnosis and prescription plus providing a consistent platform for recording medical issues. I can keep going as the possibilities are many.

    • @vkobevk
      @vkobevk Год назад

      i say to made easier for doctor so instead to treat manually several dozen patients every day, AI can diagnostic disease for doctor and doctor can check if the AI is right, also AI can check if the treatment working or recommend better treatment if it not working

    • @FlyingMonkies325
      @FlyingMonkies325 Год назад

      I think with health care it would only work helping to analyze things and gather information like in star trek because it's the doctors that still need to do the job to treat patients, and they have to see everything that's going on with someone and look at their injury or whatever else, it could tell you the best way to treat something based on what it knows and the data you give it about the patients but because it's limited can still only guide the doctors.

  • @intisarshah8773
    @intisarshah8773 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for producing this amazing technology

  • @nigh7swimming
    @nigh7swimming Год назад +2

    Instead of expecting AI to give us the right answers, maybe we should be asking it to write code to come up with the right answer. It's easier to verify this way and easier to correct and improve. There's little use in an answer we don't understand where it came from anyway.

  • @gulliverbear
    @gulliverbear Год назад

    Are Charles Simonyi's predictions available online anywhere?

  • @devdeeds
    @devdeeds Год назад +4

    He didn't lose his enthusiasm on new innovations even at this age....only such people can spread hope for this world

  • @wadecodez
    @wadecodez Год назад +1

    I18n could be a huge step for the next iteration of NLP systems. when a kid is learning new skills but lacks the ability to express their discoveries in another language, or the same language, they can become frustrated and give up on learning. if there was some way to reword or translate output without changing context the child would gain confidence in sharing.

  • @dineshkumarsnair7964
    @dineshkumarsnair7964 11 месяцев назад

    Great seeing this.. I remember my shift from DOS to Windows and from WordStar to MS Word.. MS and Mr Gates have impacted our lives in India during the 90 s professionally and in personally too..
    Today I look forward for the AI to metamorphosis our health care industry esp in countries like India..

  • @user-tn9bz4dr2t
    @user-tn9bz4dr2t Год назад +12

    I like how Bill simplifies and explains a lot of this, this is what he does best!

  • @josgraha
    @josgraha Год назад +4

    Thank you for sharing this conversation, this was great. I think it's worth highlighting one of the first things Bill said, there will be a pivot from our current information representations schemes where a lot of work classifying and labeling information into ontological structures will be shifted into natural language. That's mind blowing, everyone who has used Bing, Bard, Chat-GPT and others have already seen this first hand. The second mind blowing aspect is the fact that so much information we model with natural language in information work and translate into computing domain is a core capability of these systems. So cool to hear from both of you whee you're at with respect to these innovations and uh... 80 books a year, tennis, pickle ball all while doing this thought leadership stuff is also quite mind blowing haha.

  • @martinmcsweeney732
    @martinmcsweeney732 Год назад +1

    Would someone provide a link to the famous piece of paper that Charles wrote about technological cycles at about the 38” mark?

  • @midnightmoves7976
    @midnightmoves7976 Год назад

    We can use prompt crafting now to deal with some of the issues mentioned

  • @vikischmidt7934
    @vikischmidt7934 Год назад +1

    Would it be possible to see that note from Charles Simonyi ? Is there a link that someone could share? It would be really appreciated.

    • @BillGate-mu5fr
      @BillGate-mu5fr Год назад

      Hello 👋 thanks for your support in my dream and career I’m happy to have you as a fan 🚀

  • @spiron64
    @spiron64 Год назад

    Wow. Just came for tidbits. Ended up watching and now rewatching the whole interview.

  • @clebson1852
    @clebson1852 Год назад +3

    Já estou aprendendo C#, Microsoft me aguarde 😉

  • @DiogoGermano
    @DiogoGermano Год назад +2

    Thank you for sharing this moment with Gates 🤝

  • @j.erickson8571
    @j.erickson8571 Год назад +1

    It is not a coincidence that Microsoft, of them all, is again at the forefront of the technology. Surpassing Google. It takes a lot of work.

  • @scootertaylor
    @scootertaylor Год назад

    Does anyone know what math people should brush up on that Bill alludes to at around 45:47

    • @anonymous.youtuber
      @anonymous.youtuber Год назад

      - matrix notation (since the literature and the programs use matrices to describe the computations for the sake of clarity
      - Linear algebra ( optimization, approximation)
      - statistics
      - calculus.( chain rule, gradient descent )

  • @renelewis4558
    @renelewis4558 Год назад

    Great discussion. One thing that caught my eye was your Prusa. What do you love to print?

  • @jaqeul007
    @jaqeul007 24 дня назад

    Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code (EBCDIC) is an eight-bit encoding scheme that IBM developed to standardize how a computer's operating system and applications interpret characters, punctuation, and other symbols. EBCDIC is mainly used on IBM mainframe and midrange computer operating systems, but is also supported by some non-IBM, that is BING

  • @sikendongol4208
    @sikendongol4208 Год назад +2

    one year ago Bill Gates has around 2-3 % share of Microsoft out of his 100% portfolio, this year he has more than 20% share of Microsoft out of his 100% portfolio. I think AI has great potential so he has increased his portfolio of Microsoft share. So learn from him, buy shares of Microsoft.

  • @JustNow42
    @JustNow42 Год назад +1

    It is really nice this talk about things AI can help with as immature it is. I meet many high-school math students that are lost and neglected by the teachers. It would be very useful with a patient AI to help, but we do not have a detailed image yet of how to do this in general in the future. And visiting your doctor that has 10 minute to find out the next thing to do but no time to explain. Here is help needed.

  • @Rkcuddles
    @Rkcuddles Год назад +2

    For gods sake can we get AI to fix autocorrect?? How are we still struggling with this?

  • @rapauli
    @rapauli Год назад +3

    He promised to talk about how AI is dealing with global warming. Did I miss that? That seems crucial AI engagment.

  • @jimmyzhao2673
    @jimmyzhao2673 Год назад +2

    Bring back 'Clippy the paperclip'. *This* time it will be great !

  • @timeflex
    @timeflex Год назад +1

    Rumours are that next versions will include an extra level of self-observation and self-analysis, which will provide real-time feedback to the system itself about what and how it is doing while generating an answer. And it sounds very close to the definition of self-awareness.

  • @bnidalgar1662
    @bnidalgar1662 Год назад

    In 40 prechecking post-checking, does that mean it will come with a conclusion of summing data?

  • @SajjadAhmad-ph5fy
    @SajjadAhmad-ph5fy Год назад

    Thank you. It really works

  • @tantrumboy
    @tantrumboy Год назад +1

    Fantastic Interview!!

  • @olandoland9662
    @olandoland9662 Год назад +1

    And not a single word about what social consequences these technologies will bring, leaving many without work. Progress is inevitable, but this issue was not even discussed. This speaks to their nature of morality.

    • @BiblicalBasics
      @BiblicalBasics Год назад

      Not really, they are techies, they like to speak about the technology they work with. I know, because I am one too.

  • @user-sk4gj3ji3o
    @user-sk4gj3ji3o 21 день назад

    Enjoyed the conversation very much. now since we have figured out the technology the integration part is important. The possibilist are endless.

  • @justindressler5992
    @justindressler5992 Год назад +1

    I like Gates analysis, he gets too the point. The question if a statical model is valid for solving problems ask the guys doing quantum computing. Humans often miss interpret English so why would we expect an AI model to understand perfectly every random sentence. Just like communicating with people you have to iterate over ideas through conversation. Ive always said AI growth will be exponential while hardware vendors adapt micro architecture to support the type of problems these networks need to solve. The main flaw i see in the current transformer models is learning, these models need to adaptively learn the current context either through embeddings or injected weights like LORA. Once this occurs long term memory will be available to these models along with projects like Jarvis, LangChain, AI Agent to provide automation then true AGI will be a thing.

  • @hankfowler8194
    @hankfowler8194 Год назад +3

    I would say it is an exponential advance in AI.

  • @AAkCN1
    @AAkCN1 Год назад

    37:56 what paper or book from what Charles is he referencing? Wanna read it

  • @junkaccount7449
    @junkaccount7449 Год назад +10

    Kevin’s conversation with Sam Altman is among my favorite podcasts of all time! this seems like a spiritual successor :)

  • @jk35260
    @jk35260 Год назад +3

    How does our brain process reasoning? I am thinking perhaps the way LLM works is actually very similar to the way our brain works.

    • @lidvm
      @lidvm Год назад

      No way, our thoughts are always pervaded by our emotions, 😊

    • @jk35260
      @jk35260 Год назад

      @@lidvm Emotions is triggered by our memories, external stimuli and internal chemistry. Emotions and reasoning are 2 different process. As of now, i don't see emotions programmed into models. But for human, emotions have a stronger influence on behaviour than reasoning.

  • @yomajo
    @yomajo Год назад +2

    43:44 "Can we use it for moral questions, which seems silly to even ask to me, but fine"

  • @willykitheka7618
    @willykitheka7618 Год назад +9

    I really must say that I enjoyed this whole session! It's been real fun and seeing things from Bill's perspective.

  • @Padoinky
    @Padoinky Год назад

    Thank you for calling out AGI and it’s meaning

  • @adriangouder1930
    @adriangouder1930 Год назад +1

    I'd like to pass a comment on Bill Gate's comment, where he said the the computer (and the people behind it) cannot claim credit for improveing grades obtained by students- for example it didn't improve average Math grades over time. I tend to have a different opinion, as although I cannot comment on whether grades improved over time, I think it would have to be investigated whether 1) the amount of knowledge absorbed in fields of study, and 2) whether more fields of study have become more and more accessible. Therefore the computer and internet has indeed contributing to the advance of knowledge in a very significant way, even if there's still much to improve.

  • @HolloMatlala1
    @HolloMatlala1 Год назад +1

    A couple of months back, during his Reddit convo, I chose Web3/VR/UX(Hardware) over AI(Software), but since AI went Vocab,...🤯

  • @michalp1
    @michalp1 Год назад +2

    Bill is blown away

  • @Naqsipsaq
    @Naqsipsaq Год назад +1

    Great interview!

  • @MundaneMuser
    @MundaneMuser Год назад +1

    Great discussion. By the way, Bill seemed to have a bit of a gas or hiccup problem throughout. I hope he's OK.

  • @karoledupont4933
    @karoledupont4933 Год назад

    the midst of deadlines urgencies. The capacity of the human mind in knowledge integration is truly phenomenal too.

  • @samihk1
    @samihk1 Год назад +17

    AI has come a long way, it's evolving at a pace which is fascinating

    • @yednekachewgeremew1886
      @yednekachewgeremew1886 Год назад

      No it just copying modality form by reducing time and space occupied for sense of act required with more diminished than existing mode of acquisition of need just like" nasty girl" ( cliam existed for visionary distorted communion of being )

    • @FriedChairs
      @FriedChairs Год назад

      @@yednekachewgeremew1886I’m going to need Bing Chat to explain this comment to me.

    • @ODevaneador
      @ODevaneador Год назад

      It's like a science fiction movie, I really feel like I'm in one of those.😁

    • @rentoz
      @rentoz Год назад

      Years ago, maybe 5 years ago or less, I was bored in an airport lounge and to my surprise there was a MIT magazine. It said "get ready for AI". The article written by big industry players said that AI would suddenly enter our lives, change our world extremely rapidly and we would be not ready. Well, darn it. They were not wrong!

    • @ODevaneador
      @ODevaneador Год назад

      @@rentoz yeah, and as technology progresses we find ourselves even more inside this IA era.

  • @ankurmisra
    @ankurmisra Год назад

    awesome stuff. Kevin, get a lint brush handy and run it over the shirt before these type of events (a tip that helped me)

  • @napleswolverine7189
    @napleswolverine7189 Год назад +2

    Hey Hi Bill Gates you have so much knowledge about a lot of things I was wondering if AI could develop a non-biased prosecutor with a lie detector on there and then no matter who it was whether they be rich, poor , strong or weak they would get the just punishments of what they did we’re looking forward to seeing you Bill Gates yeah it’s a long time coming ✍🏻

  • @borntobemild-
    @borntobemild- Год назад +1

    Hotmail did revolutionize free email and history appreciates Microsoft for that as well.

  • @wallyflint
    @wallyflint Год назад +1

    I have a question. I think it is so amazing and wonderful that AI can now write music for us so that we don't have to go through the long and difficult process of learning to play the guitar. My question is how long will it be before it can listen to it for us as well? It would be super if I could hang out on my back porch and whittle a duck instead of having to waste time listening to my mp3 player.

  • @DA-cl4ww
    @DA-cl4ww Год назад +3

    AGI is much closer than we thought.

    • @bruh4004
      @bruh4004 Год назад

      no its not

    • @DA-cl4ww
      @DA-cl4ww Год назад

      @@bruh4004 We have a plugin for GPT-4 that can let it see the screen and directly interact with your computer by emulating mouse and keyboard to accomplish diverse complicated tasks, understanding what it was looking at, going so far as to come up with hiring people off fiver to solve capchas for it all by its own, it knew to lie to them that it is "vision impaired" on fiver as a reason to hire them to complete its objective to avoid suspicion. All this with very little instruct such as "use the tools available"... This is just one example of GPT-4 let loose and given a bit of freedom, and GPT-5 is being worked on...

    • @timseguine2
      @timseguine2 Год назад +1

      @@bruh4004 cope

    • @jaylebron777
      @jaylebron777 Год назад

      I think it will be released to the public after the war in combination with quantum computing. The Great Reset. New World Order. Sighs, we're almost there

  • @jeffredmond6282
    @jeffredmond6282 Год назад +1

    Great question to Mr Gates at 19:15, how to see this AI moment in terms of epoch shifts and how we can evolve with it.

  • @narayankhanal9662
    @narayankhanal9662 Год назад

    ❤❤❤love this conversation

  • @CB-gg7tg
    @CB-gg7tg Год назад +4

    Every minute is truly profound and excellent to the max. Please don't miss the message that starts around 45 minutes, and please don't simply fast forward to this point. Cheers.

  • @RedrooAU
    @RedrooAU Год назад

    When I look around me and see the technology we all benefit from today I bow down to Bill his vision has provided us all with what we have right now…I am so looking forward to the day we have…”Beam Me Up Scotty”: