08-12-2024, 04:33 PM | #1 |
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Using GPT4All as a research tool
On my PC I've just installed GPT4All and selected as model the 'Llama 3 8B Instruct'. It is presently indexing my Calibre library to what it calls LocalDocs.
For anyone interested, I suggest to check it out at GPT4All's homepage (it's free and promises to fully respect privacy). It's not that much of an install and that way you can quiery the AI to your heart's content to get an idea of its use. I expect it to be a significant tool to access specific information in my largely non-fiction library, but by no means do I consider it a replacement for Calibre for the simple reason that it is not - and doesn't pretend to be - a library manager. Among the benefits listed by the LLM, I particularly paid attention to: - Contextual search: allowing for additional questions and provision of additional context to refine results - Natural Language Processing - Integration with Chat interface For anyone linking to their Calibre library, and who have many books, I suggest to create a sub-library in its own folder and run GPT4All on that. Do it with books that you know fairly well, so you have some possibility for evaluting produced results. Checking GitHub and elsewhere, I understand that a GPT4All summarizer is in the pipeline, which would really be nice. However, I would still carry on what I've done so far, which is to export my marked text to a text file (which my ePub reader allows to create and export). Then I use - say DuckDuckGo's Chat AI - to consolidate it into a coherent summary. From now on I expect to use GPT4All to do that. I bet, at least for a long time, this sort of wetware curated summary (i.e. using my brain) will surpase what any AI have to offer, since who-better-to-know than I what is important for me. Unless you're fanatically interested in certain topics and just prefer to enjoy fictions, all of this may surely not be important. If you're an (aspiring) writer then it may be different. What I expect from GPT4All is to better understand the three existential threats presently facing humanity, which I find to be: Climate Change, Depletion of Biodiversity and Inequality at Local, Country and Global levels. I got lots of relevant literature in my library but finding it is a challenge that I hope will be reduced significantly with the use of AI. Cheers! |
08-12-2024, 06:07 PM | #2 |
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I hope the answer is never to AI being added to calibre.
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08-12-2024, 06:28 PM | #3 | |
the rook, bossing Never.
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Quote:
Last edited by Quoth; 08-13-2024 at 10:28 AM. |
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08-12-2024, 07:23 PM | #4 |
null operator (he/him)
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Moderator Notice
I moved this from the Calibre forum to the Related Tools subforum. I have deleted the almost identical post in Plugins. BR |
08-13-2024, 10:31 AM | #5 |
the rook, bossing Never.
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Calibre built-in Full Text Search (FTS) is very powerful, with phrase and near features.
You can run the search, when index is up to date, on a sub-range of titles by any normal Calibre search. It's fantastic for research. |
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08-15-2024, 04:18 PM | #6 |
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@Quoth
I'll be sure to check out the Calibre FTS results. With respect to your previous response I think you're referring to the means used and present stranglehold Big Tech has on LLMs where they try to force people to use their cloud-based systems. I surely agree that this is a very negative development and that's why I'm keeping an eye on open source alternatives. Also, AI has already had significant impact on various scientific domains enhancing research and practical applications. Just ask an AI
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08-16-2024, 05:37 AM | #7 |
the rook, bossing Never.
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Mostly lies and marketing. The so called AI of Watson to win Jeopardy was unrelated to the Watson IBM sold for Medicine, which didn't work.
Most of the so called success of AI is pattern-matching of human curated work branded as AI. The LLM, on Cloud or local is even less use. "Deep Learning" is a lie. AI Jargon along with terms like Machine Learning and Neural Networks (which aren't). I started my study of programming due to interest in AI, which was marketed as Expert Systems from the late 1980s. AI didn't do any of the things on your list. Pattern matching aided by computer databases and software from human curated sources achieved the results. Also none of that list applies to how LLM work. AI after 60 years is still a toy, now being hyped like cryptocoins and NFT. Analysis suggests this is hype bubble and will fail as the costs of builing the LLM and feeding the data exceed any income possible, which is not even considering that the productivity gains claimed to sell it are by the people selling and are lies. Misleading: https://www.theregister.com/2024/08/...y_creation_of/ This is like Big McD saying big Macs are healthy: https://www.theregister.com/2024/08/...ai_roi_report/ https://www.theregister.com/2024/08/..._going_to_pay/ This is separate to the question "Does it even work". Last edited by Quoth; 08-16-2024 at 05:49 AM. |
08-23-2024, 01:18 PM | #8 |
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@Quoth
At least you're persistently negative in the subject matter A shame that not a single of the 10 examples of useful application of AI are real and all part of a mayor conspiracy... |
08-23-2024, 05:46 PM | #9 |
the rook, bossing Never.
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The examples are real useful things, but not AI.
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08-31-2024, 05:03 PM | #10 | |
the rook, bossing Never.
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The LLM is a special case of "AI",- none of which is actual intelligence. Most is pattern matching.
This paper argues that the LLMs are over-hyped and the least useful "AI" because of poor reliability. They do not "hallucinate". That apparent behaviour is an inevitable failure. Quote:
And no-one knows if so called "general AI" is even possible, people that claim they do are lying or deluded or have no clue about intelligence. As an aside, an IQ test is a comparative performance measurement on a narrow range of tasks that requires people to be at about the same age, educational, social and ethnic background. It doesn't measure intelligence and the originator never claimed it did, Mostly it's used to create social exclusion (NI UK Grammar schools, now abolished, or US Army). |
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08-31-2024, 06:02 PM | #11 | |
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Quote:
Like most other fads in computer science, AI has become more an overused buzzword than anything meaningful. |
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08-31-2024, 07:53 PM | #12 | |
null operator (he/him)
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Quote:
BR |
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09-02-2024, 05:36 PM | #13 |
the rook, bossing Never.
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Oh, I remember Cybernetics. It was a real thing and AI was only in SF.
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10-01-2024, 05:42 PM | #14 | |
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You can detail the use cases and how the library is linked to the AI. Thanks
Quote:
The full text search, integrated in Calibre, works very well. I have about 40,000 files in my library and Calibre processes the search quickly with only 16 gb of ram. It presents the results for the first 10,000 files containing the desired term in descending order. Using Calibre together with Obsidian is very efficient. Going back to your comment, it is not clear to me whether Chatgpt installs inside a new folder in the library or creates a folder with the books you want inside the ChatgptAll installation folder. How do you, if you have 10 books, select one or two to chat with? Contrary to what is stated, I think an add-on that integrates AI to Calibre would be fabulous for researchers. Calibre would be the perfect interface for working with large amounts of information. Thanks again. |
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10-05-2024, 01:43 AM | #15 |
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Weather forecasting: the physics model is basically based on 8 different algorithms that are fed phyical data like temperature,..etc. And produce the predictions that we know today (reliable for about three days). Hence, it is pure number crunching. And the more computing power, the better the predictions. This has nothing to do with AI.
AI in weather forecasting is based on previous weather patterns, and tries to predict the future, based on that. In other words, pattern matching. The problem is that climate disaster will change these patterns massively, especiall if the jet stream changes, hence the long-term validity of it, seems to be meager at the moment. |
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