> whatever you said in defense of blockchain/crypto
You seem to be labouring under the impression that blockchain and cryptocurrencies are one in the same. The point you seem to be missing is that I'm saying they are not the same. Blockchains (usually actually trees like merkle trees) are a thing that has existed long before cryptocurrencies which are one application of technique.
> I for one fail to see the difference between these two kinds of snake oil.
The gaggle of quackish sales people with miracle cures based on LLMs is pretty much the same sort of quackish sales people that touted miracle cures based on crypto currencies, yes. But LLMs are one use of neural networks and crypto/proof-of-work is one use of blockchains.
This all started with me correcting “And for blockchain... it was launched with the promise of decentralized currency.” — which is the incorrect equivalency of blockchain/cryptocurrency writ large.
> > Some theoretical work on artificial neurons was done in the 40s.
> "The perceptron was invented in 1943 by Warren McCulloch and Walter Pitts.
Exactly. You've just repeated my sentence with a little more detail.
40s: theory
50s: attempts at practical implementation
early 70s: backprop methods (as we currently mean the term wrt neural networks, backpropagation as a more general concept existed before that) first published, starting that decades' big excitement over the potential for neural networks.
You seem to be labouring under the impression that blockchain and cryptocurrencies are one in the same. The point you seem to be missing is that I'm saying they are not the same. Blockchains (usually actually trees like merkle trees) are a thing that has existed long before cryptocurrencies which are one application of technique.
> I for one fail to see the difference between these two kinds of snake oil.
The gaggle of quackish sales people with miracle cures based on LLMs is pretty much the same sort of quackish sales people that touted miracle cures based on crypto currencies, yes. But LLMs are one use of neural networks and crypto/proof-of-work is one use of blockchains.
This all started with me correcting “And for blockchain... it was launched with the promise of decentralized currency.” — which is the incorrect equivalency of blockchain/cryptocurrency writ large.
> > Some theoretical work on artificial neurons was done in the 40s.
> "The perceptron was invented in 1943 by Warren McCulloch and Walter Pitts.
Exactly. You've just repeated my sentence with a little more detail.
40s: theory
50s: attempts at practical implementation
early 70s: backprop methods (as we currently mean the term wrt neural networks, backpropagation as a more general concept existed before that) first published, starting that decades' big excitement over the potential for neural networks.