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Hamza Farooq
01:57:08
on the fly like it's going against this. Yes, there is some caching which is involved that we have built in, but it's still very nascent to be honest.
Hamza Farooq
01:57:22
Alright! Anything else I can help answer. I know this was a lot to taken in in the last 2020 min. I did promise you this is going to be a heavy course. This is a heavy course. It is built so that you can push yourself and get out of lank chains and llama indexes, and all of that. We want you to be doing what we are doi...
Hamza Farooq
01:57:49
Victor.
Victor Calderon
01:57:50
Yeah. So regarding the like, the first homework. So first, we're gonna find information for the homework. And second, like, where should we post it?
Hamza Farooq
01:58:01
I think you should send you. Could you could upload the answer in a collab notebook.
Hamza Farooq
01:58:07
you know, create a Nuclide notebook, and maybe you can connect like I will not see if it's working. I would like to see like, you know, you have run it before, so that you can. That, I can see the outputs. And I will. Basically, if you go to Maven, I will publish the assignment as a lesson
Hamza Farooq
01:58:25
or a project, so you can. It will remind you that you have to do this project sounds good. Thanks, alright. Is that it?
Zainab Akhtar
01:58:34
So chat. Gp has this new memory feature, and I was trying to think, is it related to what we've been taught today, or because they haven't said anything on their blog. So how does that? Do you have any idea how it works? Well, that is a memory of the context of the conversation. So basically, it's more like we will rem...
Hamza Farooq
01:58:57
at the top, and you're like, Oh, I want you to remember who I am or like. You say, you know. Can you? Can you write me an overview about a company that I'm calling Zenup Inc.
Zainab Akhtar
01:59:08
So it will remember Zenap, inc, as you go through
Zainab Akhtar
01:59:11
so this is not it's not related to like it's not a question to question, thing, okay, got it makes sense
Hamza Farooq
01:59:20
for me.
Praveen Jana
01:59:21
Basically, my question is like, whenever we we are using these Llm based search.
Praveen Jana
01:59:28
are we getting the return on investment here? Because each and every call it will go through the gpus and all. And at the end of the day
Praveen Jana
01:59:36
is it adding, is it creating any benefit to the organization, or it's a waste of money.
Hamza Farooq
01:59:41
Yeah. Yeah. So let me ask you answer you in a different way. You saw the trip advisor thing right.
Praveen Jana
01:59:49
It's enough personalized. Then you'll convert. Hmm.
Hamza Farooq
01:59:54
then you basically triple. Reza has made the money. Maybe
Hamza Farooq
01:59:58
that is the Roi that you're looking for
Hamza Farooq
02:00:02
the user the option into the system.
Praveen Jana
02:00:06
For example, in an e-commerce company like, I'm searching for 3 reasons. In that case, is it worth doing element research here?
Hamza Farooq
02:00:15
Yeah, it is. It is, it is. It is very much useful because you can understand context. And you can also break down the complex query into simpler parts.
Hamza Farooq
02:00:25
You will say I want an evening attire attire. Instead of saying I'm a pad and a shirt and jacket, and all of that, you'll say, Okay, can you tell me more like it would converse with you?
Hamza Farooq
02:00:35
So conversation will be advantages. If you want to do discovery. If you just want this exact thing, then of course you don't need it, but
Hamza Farooq
02:00:44
it's for the use case that you need.
Hamza Farooq
02:00:48
It's an option added on like it's the same thing you use right. You did not use it when it wasn't there. And you like, I'm not missing anything. And now you actually miss it.
Hamza Farooq
02:01:01
because the because the delta of addiction is there? This is what Uber did. Uber is the first company that I feel came in and changed our way of doing things because it was frictionless integration. New phone.
Hamza Farooq
02:01:15
I think it's great that it exists. But I'm just saying that it it did not exist before. And you didn't want you didn't know that you were missing it
Hamza Farooq
02:01:26
right side.
Sai Yashwant
02:01:29
Yeah. So we, I think I think we've seen examples in the notebook where we are trying to cache the question itself. But is there a qualifying criteria also to look at from an answer standpoint? Right? So how
Sai Yashwant
02:01:43
quality? The answer and how good? The answer was.
Hamza Farooq
02:01:47
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that is a very important thing, right? And we don't know. See, there is no human feedback human feedback in when we use online tools. There's very difficult to get human feedback right
Hamza Farooq
02:02:01
like we can't even do a thumbs up and thumbs down to a Netflix show
Hamza Farooq
02:02:04
because we are like. Oh, no, no! This is the additional thing that I have to do in my life. So the behavior is
Hamza Farooq
02:02:11
not explicit, feedback, implicit feedback. So you have to create over and over again. Eventually, you get to a point where you're like, oh, this is what we are gonna store.
Hamza Farooq
02:02:22
So we have to run evaluations on ourselves back and forth. This is why Google is successful. See, rag is great creating a creating, creating a search engine. You can create it in in half a day.
Hamza Farooq
02:02:32
A very good search engine.
Hamza Farooq
02:02:35
which it retrieves, and it is fast. But you want to create a search engine, which is good for the customer. That is evaluation. And that's when you get human feedback on how it is working for you.
Hamza Farooq
02:02:50
Right? So you need people to say, I mean, perplexity has at reportedly 10 million daily active users.
Hamza Farooq
02:02:57
I think they used to have great answers. They don't have great answers anymore.
Vishal Ahuja
02:03:04
I had one quick question to ask. So I recently came across a very interesting tweet where? A particular question that a user had asked on, Cora
Vishal Ahuja
02:03:16
was answered, using chat GPT. And Chad, Gp. Had badly hallucinated and Google indexes Kora. So Google, when search for similar things was so showing Cora's hallucinated answer as the top response
Vishal Ahuja
02:03:32
in that kind of a scenario. This online Llm thing like, how do we know whether we're actually retrieving the correct links or not.
Hamza Farooq
02:03:42
I'm going to tell you one word.
Hamza Farooq
02:03:44
and that person that take a one name that name is in this call is his name is Eric. Eric is working very hard to fight that he's working on misinformation. He's working on breaking those those norms of what you know these things are creating. So he's working. So imagine
Hamza Farooq
02:04:04
you are saying something. And that hall hallucinated right? What if it's actually wrong? It's just ethically wrong information, right? Agreed. Even that is being pushed.
Vishal Ahuja
02:04:15
Yes.
Hamza Farooq
02:04:16
and we are not keeping an eye on it. So this is a very big problem.
Hamza Farooq
02:04:21
This is why, you know, I love having Eric on in in our sessions because he fights that he's working with companies that fight, that on entry trust, and all of that. And it will be a while before we eventually get to it.
Hamza Farooq
02:04:34
It will be a while before, because now we will go into misinformation of insanity, and our elections are coming. You know us, elections are coming. So I mean, Indian elections are coming in us, and elections are coming, and misinformation is both very high in both the countries. I mean, it's also high in other countrie...
Hamza Farooq
02:04:54
So there's gonna be a lot of misinformation. And we have to fight that I don't know how to do that. I don't have the answer to that.
Vishal Ahuja
02:05:00
Sorry. I just have one follow up question. So I was thinking, like is, are there any good applications of this kind of you know, online, Llm's
Vishal Ahuja
02:05:12
within an organization itself, like, where then, you're not hitting the Internet per se. But you're hitting the Internet.
Vishal Ahuja
02:05:22
And like, do you have any examples top of your head?
Hamza Farooq
02:05:27
I mean, basically.
Hamza Farooq
02:05:30
you are able to create or generate more information which will support a decision.
Hamza Farooq
02:05:36
So, Gito.
Hamza Farooq
02:05:39
you connect to Juda At that online or Internet on who can can can connect it
Hamza Farooq
02:05:45
will will help you with that.
Hamza Farooq
02:05:47
So there are multiple use. I think the one on one came to my mind, is 0. The number 2 is is a github copilot of sorts that can connect to the Internet of the company, and it does not have the repository as a rag. It just searches it in real time. If it's indexed within the company, then it can find that answer
Hamza Farooq
02:06:08
right? Zena. Last question from Zenith. All these aspects
Zainab Akhtar
02:06:18
so when we go into production deployment. Are we going to shift away from Google Collab? And how does that work?
Hamza Farooq
02:06:26
I would like to stay? Stick to one thing. I will explain you different architectures, so we'll explore something in azure. So the least
Hamza Farooq
02:06:34
thing that I will use is azure. I don't like azure. It's just very difficult to use.
Hamza Farooq
02:06:38
Sorry, Eric. But then, aws, and Gcp is what we're going to use in most cases. So I wanted to show you. Gcp, because Gcp. Has a lot of provisions for AI related things.
Hamza Farooq
02:06:53
Aws is great for production of software engineering.
Hamza Farooq
02:06:58
Azure is good for open AI endpoint. Only
Zainab Akhtar
02:07:04
nothing else.
Hamza Farooq
02:07:06
Sorry if anybody works for Microsoft. II just have a dislike for them. I could never use azure like I could never bring myself to using azure.
Hamza Farooq
02:07:15
Anyways, folks, thank you so much for for today's class. We will be going into deeper details about different things. But
Hamza Farooq
02:07:23
please work on these things like the. This course will require to work hands-on.
Hamza Farooq
02:07:29
If for any reason you need to drop off from the course, I will basically like we will be able to refund you after the first class, only not after the first class. So if you have done like, if you've taken the second class and you say, I don't think this is for me. We'll have to deduct or be able to follow up with the w...
Hamza Farooq
02:07:55
But this course has expectation that you should know python. You should know Rag based solutions, and you should be able to write code on collab, and then, you know, go with Gcp. And so on. So it
Hamza Farooq
02:08:08
alright
Hamza Farooq
02:08:10
so II won't let you drop off on it, but because I have taught you in multiple courses. So I'm gonna expect you to be here. And also because I like you a lot other than that, everyone. Thank you so much for being here today. Thank you for good first class. I will see you all. We'll see you on Thursday, on Friday, on the...
Hamza Farooq
02:08:39
those should are available so that they can answer any questions for you. Thank you. Everyone have a good day. Good night. Good evening. See you.