Comments
manubfr t1_j67ybjg wrote
With enough data and a smarter model you could probably ask it first to break down all tasks and then execute them sequentially without human intervention. That’s what Adept ACT-1 is trying to do.
I fully expect that a lot of complex digital tasks will one day be fully automated, you will enter a high level description of what you want, the model will propose options for you to pick, then calculate the compute budget requirements for your selected options and give you a few quotes.
So for example, “order a burger fries coke now” will essentially be free, while “write and design a 40-page comic book about the story of Theseus in the style of Frank Miller then publish it on amazon” will come back with options (maybe that task costs $20 or something, likely cheaper).
Automating entire workflows is, to me, the most exciting and realistic outcome of LLMs in the next few years.
visarga t1_j68znkm wrote
> Automating entire workflows is, to me, the most exciting and realistic outcome of LLMs in the next few years.
They can also use YouTube screen casts - there are millions - to learn about solving tasks with desktop and web apps. YT is a treasure trove of procedural data - how to do things step by step, with commentary.
visarga t1_j68zvbi wrote
> Writing a description of every step instead of just clicking seems like a downgrade to me.
Use a LLM to write the step by step prompts as well. Like SayCan
> We show how low-level tasks can be combined with large language models so that the language model provides high-level knowledge about the procedures for performing complex and temporally extended instructions, while value functions associated with these tasks provide the grounding necessary to connect this knowledge to a particular physical environment.
IluvBsissa t1_j67saun wrote
What about ADEPT ACT-1 ?
No_Ninja3309_NoNoYes t1_j69esum wrote
I don't understand this use case. Instead I would like a better Google Alert/News. You tell the bot I want to be informed about X and it collects the relevant webpages presenting them in a readable summaries format with links. Or compares prices of Y across webshops. Or a shopping assistant that fills in shopping baskets with the essential groceries on regular basis. But it shouldn't actually buy anything. I don't trust the bots enough yet.
ElvinRath t1_j67uali wrote
Writing a description of every step instead of just clicking seems like a downgrade to me.
​
Oh well, as someone said on the discord, combined with voice recognition it could be useful for people with disabilities