Yeah, so why not try and build a chip that's just inherently random?. When the token god hands you something that looks like it works, how do you know it's actually right?.
Why listen
It goes beyond the title with direct discussion of like, it's, know, including: I caught up with him in Zurich, and he's one of these rare galaxy brain people who's comfortable in probabilistic machine learning, formal verification, and chip design.
Key takeaways
01Yeah, so why not try and build a chip that's just inherently random?
02So a few months ago, Thomas blogged about building a Verilog simulator using a swarm of AI agents collaborating with each other
03Now, the reason he needed to do this is that commercial software costs a ridiculous amount of money and isn't very friendly to using agents
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listeners looking for a practical AI episode debrief