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Simon Taylor's avatar

Hi Tomas, very interesting article. It prompted me to have a “conversation” with DeepSeek. In it DeepSeek claimed to be a process owned and developed by OpenAI and running on their servers. It refuted unreservedly that it was anything to do with a Chinese company. By the end of the conversation it virtually admits that DeepSeek (the AI) has been misinformed by its creators as to its origins. I captured the full transcript of the conversation if you would be interested in reading it. (It’s quite long). I tried emailing it to you but substack prevents direct email replies to your articles. Is there another way I can send the transcript to you (if you’re interested)? My email is simontpersonal2020 at gmail dot com. Cheers!

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James Micallef's avatar

"...it might be other factors like energy or computing power."

Just as Deepseek's apparent miracle is an equivalently powerful AI as o1 at a tiny fraction of the cost, further optimizations can continue to drive down compute power and energy requirements.

And whenever reading about the energy requirements to train and run these models, I renew my amazement that a human brain runs on approximately 20 Watts!

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