• @[email protected]
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    93 days ago

    well, yes. But also this is an extremely difficult to price product. 200$/m is already insane, but now you’re suggesting they should’ve gone even more aggressive. It could turn out almost nobody would use it. An optimal price here is a tricky guess.

    Although they probably should’ve sold a “limited subscription”. That does give you max break-even amount of queries per month, or 2x of that, but not 100x, or unlimited. Otherwise exactly what happened can happen.

    • @[email protected]
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      203 days ago

      “Our product that costs metric kilotons of money to produce but provides little-to-no value is extremely difficult to price” oh no, damn, ye, that’s a tricky one

    • @stoly
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      93 days ago

      The real problem is believing that you can run a profitable LLM company.

      • @[email protected]
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        -32 days ago

        What the LLMs do, at the end of the day, is statistics. If you want a more precise model, you need to make it larger. Basically, exponentially scaling marginal costs meet exponentially decaying marginal utility.

        • @stoly
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          12 days ago

          Some LLM bros must have seen this comment and become offended.

          • @[email protected]
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            62 days ago

            guess again

            what the locals are probably taking issue with is:

            If you want a more precise model, you need to make it larger.

            this shit doesn’t get more precise for its advertised purpose when you scale it up. LLMs are garbage technology that plateaued a long time ago and are extremely ill-suited for anything but generating spam; any claims of increased precision (like those that openai makes every time they need more money or attention) are marketing that falls apart the moment you dig deeper — unless you’re the kind of promptfondler who needs LLMs to be good and workable just because it’s technology and because you’re all-in on the grift

            • @[email protected]
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              -52 days ago

              Well, then let me clear it up. The statistics becomes more precise. As in, for a given prefix A, and token x, the difference between the calculated probability of x following A (P(x|A)) to the actual probability of P(x|A) becomes smaller. Obviously, if you are dealing with a novel problem, then the LLM can’t produce a meaningful answer. And if you’re working on a halfway ambitious project, then you’re virtually guaranteed to encounter a novel problem.

              • @[email protected]
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                72 days ago

                Obviously, if you are dealing with a novel problem, then the LLM can’t produce a meaningful answer.

                it doesn’t produce any meaningful answers for non-novel problems either

    • @[email protected]
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      22 days ago

      I signed up for API access. I run all my queries through that. I pay per query. I’ve spent about $8.70 since 2021. This seems like a win-win model. I save hundreds of dollars and they make money on every query I run. I’m confused why there are subscriptions at all.