Do people realise that DeepSeek actually broke in late 2024?
It was DeepSeek V3, not R1. That’s when all the experts were getting shocked, but it took a few months before cascading to the wider public. And then followed up by R1.
I remember reading about DeepSeek last December, it took up like the 0.3% of my reading time that wasn’t completely swallowed up by J-36 and J-XDS.
A cutting edge reasoning AI model, that most in the West can’t even access, cannot capture the public imagination like two large, alien looking aircraft. It’s simply too amorphous and abstract for laypeople. It’s not tangible enough for them (let alone not being accessible for most).
As groundbreaking as DeepSeek is, it still cannot penetrate the copium of people who seriously believe the US has hangar after hangar full of secret alien (extraterrestrial) technology, stashed away for whenever things get kinetic with China.
If “public sentiment” isn’t part of the scoring criteria, only then could I possibly be inclined to pick DeepSeek.
It was DeepSeek V3, not R1. That’s when all the experts were getting shocked, but it took a few months before cascading to the wider public. And then followed up by R1.
I remember reading about DeepSeek last December, it took up like the 0.3% of my reading time that wasn’t completely swallowed up by J-36 and J-XDS.
A cutting edge reasoning AI model, that most in the West can’t even access, cannot capture the public imagination like two large, alien looking aircraft. It’s simply too amorphous and abstract for laypeople. It’s not tangible enough for them (let alone not being accessible for most).
As groundbreaking as DeepSeek is, it still cannot penetrate the copium of people who seriously believe the US has hangar after hangar full of secret alien (extraterrestrial) technology, stashed away for whenever things get kinetic with China.
If “public sentiment” isn’t part of the scoring criteria, only then could I possibly be inclined to pick DeepSeek.
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