Google Chrome's Calculations May Be Powered by Advanced Language Model in Sto App
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| Source: Mastodon | Original article
Google Chrome's app store size calculation appears inaccurate. A large language model may be causing the discrepancy.
A recent observation suggests that a large language model may be involved in calculating the app size for Google Chrome in the app store. The calculation appears to be inaccurate, with the total download size listed as 39kB and the install size as 49.73MB. This discrepancy has led to speculation that the large language model is "hallucinating" the size of the download.
This matters because it highlights the potential limitations and inaccuracies of relying on large language models for certain tasks. As these models become increasingly sophisticated and integrated into various applications, it is essential to understand their capabilities and limitations. The fact that a large language model may be struggling with a basic calculation such as app size raises questions about its reliability in more complex tasks.
As we continue to see the development and integration of large language models in various applications, including those from Google, it will be interesting to watch how these models are used and how their limitations are addressed. With Google's multimodal large language model, Gemini, being used in various experiments, including language learning and potentially app size calculations, it will be important to monitor the accuracy and reliability of these models in real-world applications.
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