Large Language Models and The End of Programming
- February 8, 2023
- 6:00 PM - 7:00 CST
- online
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Computer Science Department
Prof. Ronald Greenberg, rig@cs.luc.edu - free
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all
Open to the public. - Add to calendar
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Details
About the talk:
The field of Computer Science is headed for a major upheaval with the rise of large AI models, such as ChatGPT, that are capable of performing general-purpose reasoning and problem solving. We are headed for a future in which it will no longer be necessary to write computer programs.Our speaker, Matt Welsh, believes that most software will eventually be replaced by AI models that, given an appropriate description of a task, will directly execute that task, without requiring the creation or maintenance of conventional software. In effect, large language models act as a virtual machine that is ¿programmed¿ in natural language.
This talk will explore the implications of this prediction, drawing on recent research into the cognitive and task execution capabilities of large language models.
You can read more about this in his recent Communications of the ACM article, https://cacm.acm.org/magazines/2023/1/267976-the-end-of-programming/fulltext
Agenda:
(Times are Central Time)
6:00pm - brief intros
6:05pm - Presentation by Matt Welsh
6:45pm - Q&A
7:00 pm - end
Registration for Zoom
Note: You must register with Zoom for the remote broadcast, registering in Meetup does not give you access to the Zoom meeting.Speaker:
Matt Welsh
Matt Welsh is the CEO and Co-founder of Fixie.ai, a Seattle-based startup developing a new computational platform with AI at the core. He was previously head of engineering at OctoML, a software engineer at Apple and Xnor.ai, engineering director at Google, and a Professor of Computer Science at Harvard University. He holds a PhD from UC Berkeley.