The New Economics of Rapid Experimentation
I love that Kass encourages us to experiment more because in the age of Unmetered Intelligence the only real cost is in not failing enough.
Love this, low cost of failure lowers risks and promotes more embracing of rapid testing.
It's like when a baby begins to walk... they fall a lot. they are literally getting their footing. they have to keep trying to figure out how it all works--collecting data and learning their limits. Eventually, their running.
Spot on; what if the falling cost of failure transforms our definition of 'succes' to simply mean faster iteration in AI development?
I love that Kass encourages us to experiment more because in the age of Unmetered Intelligence the only real cost is in not failing enough.
Love this, low cost of failure lowers risks and promotes more embracing of rapid testing.
It's like when a baby begins to walk... they fall a lot. they are literally getting their footing. they have to keep trying to figure out how it all works--collecting data and learning their limits. Eventually, their running.
Spot on; what if the falling cost of failure transforms our definition of 'succes' to simply mean faster iteration in AI development?