It seems like GPT-4 is going to be coming out soon and, so I've heard, it will be awesome. Now, we don't know anything about its architecture or its size or how it was trained. If it were only trained on text (about 3.2 T tokens) in an optimal manner, then it would be about 2.5X the size of Chinchilla i.e. the size of GPT-3. So to be larger than GPT-3, it would need to be multi-modal, which could present some interesting capabilities.
So it is time to ask that question again: what's the least impressive thing that GPT-4 won't be able to do? State your assumptions to be clear i.e. a text and image generating GPT-4 in the style of X with size Y can't do Z.
Say someone without knowledge of car electronics has a reversing camera that they want to install in their car. They want to ask GPT-4 questions about how to install it, e.g. “I need to connect the display to an ignition source, I have a Toyota Prado, how do I do that?”
GPT-4 is allowed any prompting and fine tuning that does not specifically explain how to complete this task.
I think (80%) GPT-4 will perform worse than a knowledgeable human trying to help with the same task with the same interaction possibilities (I.e. if GPT-4 is just text, then just explaining in text). Less confident about how much worse, because I’m not sure what the baseline success rate would be.
Performing better would be very impressive though. Maybe (55%) it’s also worse in the specified conditions at something simpler like “interactively help someone (child/old person) create a Facebook account”
Not clear if you're suggesting that this response is consistent with high performance on the task, but I'm pretty confident it's not.
The sensible part of this is just restating the original request, more or less (did you know how to connect an ignition/accessory source before? If not, do you know now?) The explanation of what an accessory source does is maybe helpful, but the question was how to connect it. The advise to connect the camera’s power wire is wrong; that should be connected to the reverse lights. I’d imagine more useful would be: how to find t... (read more)