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Bill Gates admires the rapid development of Chatgpt

 

Bill Gates

Bill Gates is passionate about the Chatgpt application


When Bill Gates completed the AP Biology exam, he was astonished by the quick development of AI software, such as ChatGPT, which impressed him with its potential.


Gates claimed to have tested the OpenAI-developed chatbot powered by artificial intelligence for the first time in June of last year, but he wasn't impressed and didn't think it was useful.


Gates requested that OpenAI CEO Sam Altman make ChatGPT available to him once more after he had proven advanced human-level ability by passing the AP Biology test with the best possible score.


Gates estimated that he had given Altman a fairly challenging task and that it would take the chatbot three years to do it.


Two months later, the OpenAI developers went back to see Gates win the ChatGPT competition.


"I was shocked," Gates recalled, "that the program went from not being able to read or write in a human-like way to being able to do both on an almost human-like level."


The billionaire claims that ChatGPT's achievement has many implications regarding hallucinations and similar phenomena, pointing out that even the most sophisticated AI models are capable of making significant errors or fabricating data.


This quick advancement made Gates a lover of robots and enthusiastic about the technology's prospective uses, including in education.


Gates, an optimist in this subject, projected that while AI teachers won't take the place of teachers any time soon, intelligent chatbots like ChatGPT or Bard might start assisting kids with reading and writing as early as next year.


They aim to make life easier for teachers and offer lower-cost educational options to disadvantaged students in low-income areas, both locally and abroad.


Because these tools can improve education overall and reduce the achievement gap for low-income minority children, "ChatGPT's developments make me anticipate that it can dramatically change the field of education over the next decade," Gates said.

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