I have seen GPT-3 in action, it's no joke it's actually daunting. There's a reason the makers didn't want to release it and theres a damn good reason you need to jump through hoops just to get limited access to it. I watched gpt3 code a clone of instagram, google search and facebook in seconds from only spoken instructions. They were fully functional and all the code it generated was visible it was not smoke and mirrors. What really alarmed me was it's ability to infer data from what was said and read between the lines.
For example if you tell it that users have a wallet and 2 minutes later after changing subject tell it to put a red button that adds 5. It will know not only that it means add 5 to the user wallet but also knows it's dealing with a currency. I have seen it manage many really abstract instructions in a way that convinced me in under 5 minutes of first seeing it that front end coding is a dead.
Lostandfound 10 points 3.9 years ago
I have seen GPT-3 in action, it's no joke it's actually daunting. There's a reason the makers didn't want to release it and theres a damn good reason you need to jump through hoops just to get limited access to it. I watched gpt3 code a clone of instagram, google search and facebook in seconds from only spoken instructions. They were fully functional and all the code it generated was visible it was not smoke and mirrors. What really alarmed me was it's ability to infer data from what was said and read between the lines.
For example if you tell it that users have a wallet and 2 minutes later after changing subject tell it to put a red button that adds 5. It will know not only that it means add 5 to the user wallet but also knows it's dealing with a currency. I have seen it manage many really abstract instructions in a way that convinced me in under 5 minutes of first seeing it that front end coding is a dead.