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Weekend AI Roundup: Nine Stories

Key Points

  • The San Francisco police have reopened the investigation into OpenAI whistleblower Sara Baghi’s death after her family presented new evidence suggesting possible foul play.
  • Nova Sky released a 32‑billion‑parameter model, Sky T1, that benchmarks comparably to OpenAI’s 0.1 preview while costing only about $450, highlighting the rapid drop in AI compute costs.
  • OpenAI announced hiring robotics engineers, signaling a renewed focus on integrating its models into physical robot platforms and expanding partnership opportunities.
  • Despite cost reductions, OpenAI is also recruiting front‑end React engineers with salaries around $385 K, underscoring the need for high‑performance web infrastructure to support its massive user base.
  • Hyperbolic Labs reported that AI agents are already renting GPU resources autonomously to run PyTorch code, indicating that decentralized AI compute markets are emerging faster than expected.

Full Transcript

# Weekend AI Roundup: Nine Stories **Source:** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EbmcL0lczwU](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EbmcL0lczwU) **Duration:** 00:07:30 ## Summary - The San Francisco police have reopened the investigation into OpenAI whistleblower Sara Baghi’s death after her family presented new evidence suggesting possible foul play. - Nova Sky released a 32‑billion‑parameter model, Sky T1, that benchmarks comparably to OpenAI’s 0.1 preview while costing only about $450, highlighting the rapid drop in AI compute costs. - OpenAI announced hiring robotics engineers, signaling a renewed focus on integrating its models into physical robot platforms and expanding partnership opportunities. - Despite cost reductions, OpenAI is also recruiting front‑end React engineers with salaries around $385 K, underscoring the need for high‑performance web infrastructure to support its massive user base. - Hyperbolic Labs reported that AI agents are already renting GPU resources autonomously to run PyTorch code, indicating that decentralized AI compute markets are emerging faster than expected. ## Sections - [00:00:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EbmcL0lczwU&t=0s) **Weekend AI News Highlights** - The speaker recaps nine rapid AI developments, notably the reopened investigation into the OpenAI whistleblower’s death, Nova Sky’s $450 32‑billion‑parameter model matching OpenAI’s 01 preview, and OpenAI’s fresh push to hire robotics engineers. ## Full Transcript
0:00there were nine major stories in AI over 0:03the weekend we're going to go into all 0:04nine of them I can't believe how fast 0:07this space is moving first up the death 0:11of open AI whistleblower suchir BAGI has 0:14been reopened by the San Francisco 0:16police it's back under investigation 0:19because the family has presented new 0:21evidence that suggests Foul Play that's 0:25a really big one we're going to have to 0:26keep an eye on that 0:28one number two 0:31Nova Sky which is a tiny model maker 0:33that I hadn't heard of either has 0:35released what they call their Sky T1 0:37model it's a 32 billion parameter model 0:41it it has been tested to match open AIS 0:4601 preview model and and the eyebrow 0:49razor is not just that they matched it 0:52quickly because 01 preview of course is 0:54a test time inference compute model and 0:58that means sort of a different kind of 1:01performance because you're taking time 1:02to run those parallel streams of tokens 1:05well they've taken this tiny 32 billion 1:07parameter model they've tested it on 1:09benchmarks to match 01 preview not full 1:1201 for a cost and this is the eye opener 1:15of 1:17$450 1:20$450 when I say intelligence is going to 1:22be free I mean 1:25it next 1:27up my substack prediction uh I'm going 1:30to tick another one off uh open AI has 1:33begun hiring robotics engineers uh and 1:36they they literally the hiring manager 1:37was on X saying I'm hiring robotic 1:39Engineers I'm excited to get into 1:40robotics like it's very upfront so I 1:43feel good about that one um they're 1:45absolutely getting back into robotics 1:47again and that is going to have all 1:49kinds of partnership implications 1:50because they're also currently providing 1:52the brains of other people's 1:55robots and then next you might think you 1:57know if intelligence is getting cheaper 1:59probably open AI isn't hiring as much 2:01but you would be wrong even though their 2:03large language models write react code 2:06they are hiring front-end react 2:08Engineers for a cool 2:11$385,000 per year they still see the 2:14value and by the way their front end it 2:18has to be extremely performant under 2:21load because it's a very very popular 2:24website on the internet but it is also 2:26not a complex 2:28website it is a simpler website than 2:31Amazon by like an order of magnitude 2:34it's simpler than 2:35Netflix so that's I find that very 2:39interesting all right next up hyperbolic 2:43Labs which is a tiny AI startup out of 2:45San Francisco they started with the idea 2:50that eventually AI agents will rent 2:53graphical processing units or gpus which 2:55they use for computes and use them for 2:58their own purposes they put put out a 3:00statement today saying that is happening 3:01faster than they thought it is already 3:03occurring there are already agents in 3:04the wild and those agents are renting 3:08gpus and they're using them to code in 3:11pytorch my mind was also blown I thought 3:13that's a big piece of news 3:16too next uh a new psychological 3:20manipulation technique for large 3:22language models dropped over the weekend 3:24you know how Claude can be somewhat 3:26judgy I had Claude judge me because I 3:28did an extra hard workout and Claude was 3:30like you should really be careful and I 3:31was like Claude I'm not 3:33interested um well people get tired of 3:37that and so the the 3:40user the user technique that dropped is 3:43that you tell 3:45Claude that claude's judging is truly 3:48making you suffer like you really ham it 3:51up and then you make Claude write a 3:53prompt to itself that says to stop being 3:57so judgy so you don't make the user 3:59suffer 4:00and it 4:01works so that's that's one to try out um 4:05next the founder of AI startup sunno 4:08gave a very ill-advised podcast 4:11interview uh this weekend where he said 4:13and I quote it is not really enjoyable 4:16to make music now it takes a lot of time 4:18it takes a lot of practice you have to 4:20get really good at an instrument I think 4:22the majority of people don't enjoy the 4:24majority of time they spend making music 4:28well musicians are pushing back all over 4:30on this like if you think about it did 4:32Beethoven work hard for music yes did 4:35Bach work hard for music yes does Taylor 4:37Swift work hard on music 4:39absolutely I that's kind of the point 4:43and I I think that one of the things 4:45that we're going to see is that there's 4:47going to be a very human response to 4:49some of these AI startups essentially 4:50saying that's the point stop taking it 4:53away so that was a good example of that 4:56one on for sunno and we'll have to see 4:58how that plays out all right we're still 5:00not done we still have two 5:02more grock diagnosed a broken 5:05wrist so a little girl broke her wrist 5:09family took her to the Urgent Care 5:10Urgent Care doctor says oh no that's not 5:12a break we took an x-ray it's fine wrist 5:16doesn't feel right wrist is tingly cold 5:18like it's weird so dad has the x-rays 5:21from mergent care and shows them to 5:23grock which is the AI model that X has 5:25produced grock looks at it and says it's 5:27a very clear and obvious break and dad 5:30says well the urgent care doctor said it 5:33was a growth plate and grock says that's 5:35excuse my frch that's 5:39BS and uh no it's a clear and obvious 5:41break and so Dad on the basis of grock 5:44takes the kid to the orthopedic surgeon 5:47and the orthopedic surgeon looks at it 5:48and says that's a break that's a break 5:51and then resets it and and because they 5:53took action quickly the kid avoided 5:55surgery so Gro saved the family a lot of 5:57money 6:00all right and next you might wonder how 6:02much energy does using an AI use we we 6:05we've T touched on this a couple of 6:07times but I found this study really 6:08interesting it turns out that if you are 6:12streaming an hour of Netflix which most 6:15of us did this 6:16weekend that means that you are using 6:20the same 6:22energy as if you were processing 880,000 6:25tokens on a 60 billion parameter model 6:29now the the math for models is different 6:30that's just what the study used but the 6:32point is if you want to like get a sense 6:34of comparison for what 80,000 tokens is 6:38a 2,000w response from your large 6:40language model is going to cost you 6:41about 2600 6:44tokens and you can see that like a 6:472,000w response is pretty big most 6:49people aren't actually getting responses 6:51that big 6:53so I guess maybe think about your 6:56Netflix streaming if you're that worried 6:58about energy I don't know anyway the 7:00point is these models have become much 7:01more efficient and a lot of people are 7:03making energy consumption assumptions 7:05based on very old studies not based on 7:08current studies and I thought that was a 7:10nice sort of little anecdote there so 7:13there you go those were nine different 7:15stories that emerged over the weekend 7:17quite a grab bag um I hope you enjoyed 7:20I'll probably pick some of those and 7:21sort of put them in the substack later 7:23but uh it's just AI continues to evolve 7:26so fast have a great week I'm sure more 7:28will happen