Let’s say you spend an unholy amount of processing time training a 70b. You like history. You want a good LLM for historical info.

By the time you upload it the LLM is outdated. Now what?

If you want it to speak accurately about modern events you’d have to retrain it again. Repeating the process over and over, because time keeps moving on while your LLM does not.

This clearly could become more efficient. Optimally, each subject would probably need to be considered a separate file while the central “brain” of the LLM becomes its own structure.

As it stands, updating the entire LLM is very cost prohibitive and makes no sense if you’re trying to work out specific data points. Why, for example, would you want to update the entire Cantonese dictionary when you just want to fix the list of Alaskan donut shops?

I understand that the tech currently has to treat both the information and the “thinking” behind an LLM as one and the same. It seems more efficient, more effective, to separate the two.

  • Ion_GPT@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I got the idea, but I think your example is bad. History is something that is changing really slow and is not even changing, it just increases.