• RobotToaster@mander.xyz
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    1 year ago

    I don’t see how that makes sense as a statement, an ai with access to a 56k modem can send a fax. It feels like they’re just using ai as a buzzword.

    • denial@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      Of cause that is a BS reason. But they should have stopped using fax machines 20 years ago. How can any reason they give why they have to stop now be any other than BS.

    • smeg@feddit.uk
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      1 year ago

      It reads to me more just as a statement of contrast, as in ‘we’re in a world of incredibly high-tech new technology, we shouldn’t still be using something from the Victorian era!’

    • sweng@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      The issue is not sending, it is receiving. With a fax you need to do some OCR to extract the text, which you then can feed into e.g an AI.

        • sweng@programming.dev
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          1 year ago

          At horrendous expense, yes. Using it for OCR makes little sense. And compared to just sending the text directly, even OCR is expensive.

              • Mongostein@lemmy.ca
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                1 year ago

                I wouldn’t do it on my phone. 🙄

                What I’m saying is that it would probably be fairly easy to incorporate an already existing technology in to an AI.

          • DdCno1@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            I was about to say, you could do serviceable OCR on a 486, which illustrates just how little processing power is needed for conventional approaches compared to this hallucinating AI nonsense.

            • GenosseFlosse@lemmy.nz
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              1 year ago

              OCR existed long before the 486. AFAIK it was already used in the 70’s or 80’s to scan mail and presort them based on the postcode. I remember that postcards had light orange boxes (presumably because this color was invisible to B/W scanners?) with dots inside where you where supposed to write the postcode numbers in.

              • sweng@programming.dev
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                1 year ago

                Doing OCR in a very specific format, in a small specific area, using a set of only 9 characters, and having a list of all possible results, is not really the same problem at all.