They literally “invented” the method used by chatgpt. They are still ahead with AI research. Their main problem is bringing the value to the market. But that is a management problem. Management has no clear vision unfortunately. But it might takes just few changes at the highest management level to completely change the game. Google has still the best r&d in the tech world, they must return to use it properly
And DeepMind is doing things that no one has done before, some of which were groundbreaking contributions to the field of biology. Ah, what am I saying … I got confused. Google bad!
They’ve been under the fold for a while now. I don’t think they’re in any danger of being graveyarded. I think for them internal politics, part of which being shareholder pressure, will be the challenge to keep on top of.
I was not thinking about graveyard, more about losing the freedom of research to “deliver products to market”. That would mean killing the greatness of deepmind
I was not thinking about graveyard, more about losing the freedom of research to “deliver products to market”. That would mean killing the greatness of deepmind
In a way, it looks even worse for a company that it was ahead in the fundamental research, and the corporate bureaucracy and management held it back so much that competitors took the difficult ideas invented there and turned them into products first. My intuition is that it’s easier to fix being behind on a research and technology level than it is to fix having bad corporate culture and complacent management focused only on protecting existing cash cows.
They literally “invented” the method used by chatgpt. They are still ahead with AI research. Their main problem is bringing the value to the market. But that is a management problem. Management has no clear vision unfortunately. But it might takes just few changes at the highest management level to completely change the game. Google has still the best r&d in the tech world, they must return to use it properly
And DeepMind is doing things that no one has done before, some of which were groundbreaking contributions to the field of biology. Ah, what am I saying … I got confused. Google bad!
Deepmind deserves a nobel prize, this is a fact
Deepmind was even bought by Google. Let’s hope this “google deepmind” idea won’t kill it. They are crazy good
They’ve been under the fold for a while now. I don’t think they’re in any danger of being graveyarded. I think for them internal politics, part of which being shareholder pressure, will be the challenge to keep on top of.
I was not thinking about graveyard, more about losing the freedom of research to “deliver products to market”. That would mean killing the greatness of deepmind
Ah, so the same as what I was thinking of. Got it. 👌
I was not thinking about graveyard, more about losing the freedom of research to “deliver products to market”. That would mean killing the greatness of deepmind
In a way, it looks even worse for a company that it was ahead in the fundamental research, and the corporate bureaucracy and management held it back so much that competitors took the difficult ideas invented there and turned them into products first. My intuition is that it’s easier to fix being behind on a research and technology level than it is to fix having bad corporate culture and complacent management focused only on protecting existing cash cows.