Early reactions to Nvidia’s DLSS 5 were swift and skeptical, with some observers likening the technology to an Instagram-style filter applied over gameplay footage. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang refuted the allegations, but subsequent clarifications have helped outline how the system actually works – and where it can fall short.

  • shyguyblue@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    Best comment about this was from a video posted yesterday:

    Nvidia keeps saying that this tech is still a work in progress, yet they made the decision to release a demo in its current state…

      • dvoraqs@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        What isn’t? Everything is growing, decaying, or changing in some way, honestly.

        • BassTurd@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          AI is the most rushed to market product I think I’ve ever seen in my life. It makes Cyberpunk’s release like like a polished gem in comparison. Yes, things evolve over their life cycle for better or worse, but none of this other things have been so ingrained in everything, cost even a fraction of LLMs, both monetarily and environmentally, it sucked as hard.

          AI is a different monster. A shitty shitty monster.

          • Corngood@lemmy.ml
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            5 hours ago

            It’s because CEOs don’t play cyberpunk, but they did try chatgpt and got an immediate boner thinking about all the people they could lay off.

            • BremboTheFourth@piefed.ca
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              4 hours ago

              More like they saw the potential to ruin most plebs’ already limited abilities to figure out wtf is happening in the world, thought they would be too smart to fall for that shit, and decided they should open Pandora’s box and sell it like it’s Prometheus’s fire

              • badgermurphy@lemmy.world
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                49 minutes ago

                Unlike Pandora’s box, though, a lot of the dumber applications of this stuff will go back in when the VC money dries up.

    • justOnePersistentKbinPlease@fedia.io
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      8 hours ago

      As microslop was constantly saying last year, LLMs and their ilk are a product in search of an application.

      Every company is desperate to find anything these garbage machines can do well enough to validate the trillion or so dollars pumped into them.

      Late edit: Also, Salesforce is literally mostly about barely functional tech with shiny demos. Thats why there is a consulting and customization industry worrth at least 10s if not 100s of billions that supports just their software.

    • phar@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      Demos are very often an example of in progress works or technology. That literally happens all the time.

      • Epzillon@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        Doesnt really matter IMO. If you have known bugs and flaws you dont showcase those, or if they are present in the showcase you atleast adress them and show what is to be expected upon release. NVIDIA just flat out didnt care. As soon as motion increases the artefacting is crazy. How do you even decide that this is remotely good enough for a demo?

        • phar@lemmy.world
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          3 hours ago

          Okay but that is not what the person said or what the poster above quoted as being the best part. I’m not commenting on the overall performance I’m just saying that demos very often are exactly what that sentence implies they shouldn’t be.

        • [deleted]@piefed.world
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          8 hours ago

          Nvidia hears people like motion blur and AI slop so they put some AI slop in their motion blur.

          • Valmond@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            7 hours ago

            Ugh. “Everyone is doing BLOOM, lets also do BLOOM but at +150% more!”

            I remember that, motion blur came after and now I guess ai 😓

        • Gsus4@mander.xyz
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          7 hours ago

          :3

          PS: The hallucinations are artistic freedom 😂

          • justOnePersistentKbinPlease@fedia.io
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            2 hours ago

            “Hallucinations” are an inherent part of the programming.

            It is literally impossible to prevent them. The systems work on building the fuzzy average response to a query via complex statistics. There is no thinking or creativity.

      • Telorand@reddthat.com
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        9 hours ago

        And yet, they chose to demo a broken technology with obvious bugs and flaws. The demos from tech companies are supposed to make people excited, not recoil in disgust.

        This isn’t some tiny company, either. It’s fucking nVidia, who supposedly has the money to create a good demo.