Just got schooled by an AI.
According to Wiktionary:
(UK) IPA(key): /ˈstɹɔːb(ə)ɹi/
(US) IPA(key): /ˈstɹɔˌbɛɹi/
…there are indeed only two /ɹ/ in strawberry.
So much for dissing on AIs for not being able to count.
Just got schooled by an AI.
According to Wiktionary:
(UK) IPA(key): /ˈstɹɔːb(ə)ɹi/
(US) IPA(key): /ˈstɹɔˌbɛɹi/
…there are indeed only two /ɹ/ in strawberry.
So much for dissing on AIs for not being able to count.
[sarcasm] Yeah, because if you randomly throw more bricks in a construction site, the bigger pile of debris will look more like a house, right. [/sarcasm]
Those are the chatbots available through DDG. I just found it amusing enough to share, given
Small note regarding “reasoning”: just like “hallucination” and anything they say about semantics, it’s a red herring that obfuscates what is really happening.
At the end of the day it’s simply weighting the next token based on the previous tokens + prompt, and optionally calling some external tool. It is not really reasoning; what’s doing is not too different in spirit from Markov chains, except more complex.
If large “language” models don’t count as “AI systems”, then what you shared in the OP does not either. You can’t eat your cake and have it too.
I.e. they’re unable to perform actual maths.
It doesn’t matter if the answer “feels” right (whatever this means). The answer is incorrect.
No, the fact they are unable to perform a simple logical procedure is not “impressive”. Specially not when outputting the “approximation” as if it was the true value; note how none of the models outputted anything remotely similar to “the result is close to
$number
” or “the result is approximately$number
”.None of the prompts had a time limit. You’re making shit up.
Also. Sure, humans brainfart all the time; that does not magically mean that those systems are smart or doing some 4D chess as your OP implies.
I.e. it would need to use some external tool, since it’s unable to handle logic by itself, as exemplified by maths.
The output is clearly handling it as letters. It hyphenates the letters to highlight them, it mentions “digram” (i.e. a sequence of two graphemes), so goes on. And in no moment is referring to anything that can be understood as associated with sounds, phonemes. And it’s claiming there’s an ⟨r⟩ «in the middle of the “rr” combination».
There’s no context whatsoever to justify any of those interpretations.
If this was a human being, it would not be an assumption. Assumption is that sort of shit you make up from nowhere; here context dictates the reading of “r” as “the letter ⟨r⟩”.
However since this is a bot it isn’t even assuming. Just like a boulder doesn’t “assume” you want it to roll down; it simply reacts to an external stimulus.
There’s no ambiguity in the initial prompt. And no, it did not correct what it says; the last reply is still babble, you don’t count ⟨rr⟩ in English as a single letter.
I’d rather not answer this one because, if I did, I’d be pissing on Beehaw’s core values.
I feel like you already did, and I won’t be responding in kind. Good day, to you.