AI and trains

Started by port perran, February 18, 2025, 03:49:29 PM

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port perran

I've been playing around with AI Imaging Projects and came up with this :


I'm not sure that AI has grasped what should be in the tender  ???
I'm sure I'll get used to cream first soon.

chrism

It hasn't quite grasped the purpose of coupling rods either  :smiley-laughing:

Newportnobby

Not sure if I have any real intelligence let alone the artificial sort :-[

Train Waiting

Looks like one of those pub signs painted by someone who has never seen a steam locomotive.

I think we are safe from AI for a while yet.

All good wishes.

John
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Bealman

I love the people in the tender. I know a few I'd be quite happy to see in there :D
Vision over visibility. Bono, U2.

grumbeast

As someone who spent most of their 20s and 30s in AI research, all I can say is I'm sorry, and I hope it never gets better than this and that we realise what a fools errand it all is.

I have to say though, people seem to be a pretty smoke free fuel


PLD

So called "AI" is very much the latest fad, but much of the technology that is labelled as such is in reality high intensity but dumb machine processing, following or applying a predefined detailed ruleset, but does not have the capacity to ingest feedback to autonomously learn and adapt.

The true test is to submit the same request in six months time and see what the results are - has it learnt from it's errors or does it give an identical result? If it's the same it's not 'intelligent' it's just dumb processing following a fixed ruleset.  >:(

Snowwolflair

Looking at the picture DAPOL now makes sense.  ????

Newportnobby

Quote from: PLD on February 18, 2025, 11:18:46 PMSo called "AI" is very much the latest fad, but much of the technology that is labelled as such is in reality high intensity but dumb machine processing, following or applying a predefined detailed ruleset, but does not have the capacity to ingest feedback to autonomously learn and adapt.


Let's hope it never gains that capacity. Another 'SkyNet', anyone? :worried:  ;)

Bealman

I really don't know what the fuss is about. As PLD says, it's merely number crunching big time.

This stuff is presented, but it's us who determine if a load of crap or not.

I worry about the music people getting ripped off, though.

Ah, crap, don't look at it. Problem solved!
Vision over visibility. Bono, U2.

ntpntpntp

I'm glad I'm pretty much at the end of my career as a software developer (only a handful of years to go, and really only staying on to look after older systems and keep building up the retirement toy train fund :) )   My company are getting all excited about CoPilot and ChatGPT but I'm afraid AI just doesn't interest me at all.

Worst use of "generative AI" has to be the rubbish ebay listing descriptions, no intelligence there at all it's just regurgitating unhelpful garbage.
Nick.   2021 celebrating the 25th anniversary of "Königshafen" exhibition layout!
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njee20

Of course it's easy to scoff at stuff like this and say "how absurd, what does this supposed "AI" know", but then have you seen any of the stuff about asking people on the street to draw a bicycle!?

This sort of use of AI is akin to the early days of the iPhone, when you could "drink" a virtual pint by tipping the phone. It's a daft novelty which serves no meaningful purpose. However there are some genuinely interesting applications of the technology. I read an interesting piece the other day about the prevalence of software engeering roles. They've more than halved since 2022, because teams are using native AI tools to write code faster. I'm a little sceptical, but I know a number of our engineers use it. You can have a debate with it, which can be helpful to test ideas and validate thoughts, or come up with angles you may not have done.

Even stupid stuff like writing Excel formulae, if you want to know how to do something then ask in plain English (I want to know how many people in this list want the beef for dinner etc) it'll produce (and explain) the formula. That's helpful, and you can tweak the ask; "no, sorry, the data is in column B" or whatever.

Will it give a better result in 6 months time when asked to make a picture of a steam train? Who knows, probably, particularly if you help it by saying it needs coal in the tender, and what the coupling rods do etc, but that isn't really the point.


mickeyflinn

Quote from: Newportnobby on February 19, 2025, 11:44:55 AM
Central heating for the tent - be nice and cosy for a few minutes!!

acook

but when her tent burns down she would have to share mine.  :claphappy:
And it generated the image by just reading my thoughts................  :worried:

Alan

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