Yes, this is official documentation from the MS Learn course for the Agentic AI Solution Architect certificate

Microslop SharePhont™

  • Regrettable_incident@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    TBF ‘combigent’ should be a word. Not sure I can think of a unique case that justifies it, but it sounds like it could easily be a word.

    • bricklove@midwest.social
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      22 hours ago

      It sounds like something that would ease the combining of ingredients/components. Like an emulsifier but more general. “An emulsifier is a combigent for oil and water”

  • corey931@lemmy.wtf
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    1 day ago

    For years, I’ve rather read Stackoverflow comments than Microsoft’s nearly unusable documentation. It’s as if they don’t know how to write coherently

    • licketysplit@programming.dev
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      1 day ago

      Then they train their troubleshooting clanker on said unusuable documentation so it’s unhelpful but it won’t let you talk to a human who might actually be able to assist you.

  • kshade@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    The worst is claiming Copilot “understands intent & meaning”, the funny mistakes more or less show that that’s just a blatant lie.

  • mycodesucks@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Anyone remember how much nicer the world felt before we all realized nobody in charge of anything with any real power has any idea what the fuck they’re doing?

    • OwOarchist@pawb.social
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      3 days ago

      We didn’t all realize that at the same point. Some of us have known that for a very long time.

    • wheezy@lemmy.ml
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      3 days ago

      They know what they are doing. Their goals just don’t align with the rest of humanity.

      The mistake we make is in assuming that government choices are born of incompetence… The actions of empire are not incompetent. They are not intended to serve you or the citizens, but to serve material interests, the plunder of land, natural resources, markets, and cheap labor".

      -Michael Parenti

      RIP to the GOAT

      Edit: He talks about it in the lecture starting around 15:35. Though the quote above is from his book “against empire”

      https://youtu.be/s5oPFAfdrkU?t=935

    • Bloefz@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Well back then we thought everyone in charge was evil. Back then we had Krutschev, Nixon etc. Always nuclear war looming. And Reagan with this trickle downs, the Bush wars over made-up WMDs etc.

      I don’t think there was ever really a positive period. Maybe the 90s which was kinda the high point. Economics were good, America and NATO was the undisputed world power, nobody took global warming seriously yet and the internet was promising a great future.

      Then after 2000 we had the dot com crash, 9/11, the resulting wars, Russia becoming an enemy again, the financial world crisis, the rise of the internet as a surveillance tool, global warming, the pandemic, exploding house prices everywhere.

      Really pretty much exactly after the change of the century everything turned to shit.

      • WalleyeWarrior@midwest.social
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        3 days ago

        Economics were good if you lived in a western country. Former Soviet Block, Yugoslavia, and global South countries were having a rough go of thing in the 90s

        • FiniteBanjo@feddit.online
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          2 days ago

          They’re still having a rough go of things, and they were having a rough go of things before that as well, so that’s not really a valid counterpoint.

          • NocturnalMorning@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            If they were having a rough go of things in the 90s. Then the 90s weren’t the shining beacon of success it’s claimed to be. That point is very much valid.

            • FiniteBanjo@feddit.online
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              24 hours ago

              Then there as never been in the history of this earth a shining beacon of success because at every waking moment there wasn’t an optimal number of people immune to all disease, death, and suffering, to no downside to nature around them?

              The 90s is where the curve peaked for a lot of people. China had finished bringing 70% of their population out of extreme poverty since the world war era, the USA markets and deficit were stable though heading in a bad direction due to Reagan, and Europe was having a big cultural and tourism boom.

    • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 days ago

      Nope.

      I’m legitimately having a blast right now, 100% affirmed by reality, which I spent the last roughly 15 years of trying to tell people, very labriously, with very detailed reasoning, why what is now obvious was then and basically always has been the case.

      Your discomfort is my schadenfreude.

    • youcantreadthis@quokk.au
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      3 days ago

      No that was a long time ago for some of us it’s always been like this you were just insulated by privilege

  • CoopaLoopa@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 days ago

    Saw this article from Microslop the other day about their MDASH copilot model competing with Mythos for bug finding/fixing.

    Microsoft security blog

    And here’s the image they went with for the flowchart of what the AI does… Complete with overlapping text and the worst layout I’ve ever seen.

    Zero humans proofed this.

    Microsoft AI slop flowchart

    • death_to_carrots@feddit.org
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      3 days ago

      I know this! This is a slide deck which only makes sense in an interactive way, where the steps are revealed after one another. Probably straight from a presentation.

      Don’t attribute bad work to AI which can be done in the same way by an incompetent human.

      • Fmstrat@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        As someone who’s career depended on presentations for a while:

        Never build animations in-slide (unless they are purely aesthetic).

        Instead:

        Build multiple slides which duplicate the previous and add new boxes with transitions on the slides. Bonus: change the title on each build to cover the key point.

        Sure, they take longer to edit. But that leave-behind export to PDF always works.

    • Otter@lemmy.ca
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      3 days ago

      It almost makes me think a human worker intentionally made these slides. LLMs don’t really have the creativity to make typos, which is how I can sometimes catch LLM comments on here. Also “SharePhont” is pretty funny

      Unless they used an image generator to make the slides, which would be extra stupid

      edit: turns out it WAS the extra stupid

      • AnAmericanPotato@programming.dev
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        3 days ago

        Oh it’s definitely extra stupid. Looks like the slide was made whole-cloth by an image generator, not like the text was generated by an LLM and pasted in.

        Image generators make typos all the time (if you can call them that).

        See also: continvoucly morged

        • luciferofastora@feddit.org
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          1 hour ago

          Image generators make typos all the time (if you can call them that).

          Primitive image generators don’t “understand” semantics of the patterns they assemble. The obvious example we’re probably all familiar with is “AI hands” with weird poses, excessive fingers, sometimes even extra arms etc.: the AI knows the pattern we understand as a finger, it knows the correlation with those we see as hands and arms, but it doesn’t how what a hand is or why it’s important to have a specific number of those patterns combined in specific ways.

          Text is the same: The model knows the graphic patterns of letters, maybe knows the patterns of words the letter-patterns often occur in, but the same randomisation that can produce different enough results to look human can also lead to randomly generating patterns that it fundamentally can not know aren’t actually valid words.

           

          There are solutions, such as using a more specialised tool like a combined layout generator and text generator with feedback to make the text fit the layout. Using the right tool for the task at hand, paired with supervision by a human that knows its shortcomings and can check whether and where it trips up, might do a better job.

          But that human has to have the required know-how, and if you really want to use a single LLM to feed all prompts into, that model should be capable of detecting and delegating the work to those specialised tools (checking with the prompter to confirm that its detection is accurate).

          A simple all-purpose-model and general “prompt engineer” without subject-specific experience and training just won’t cut it. The marketing for these tools generally seems terribly intransparent about that problem, and executives generally seem to be oblivious to it (or just indifferent, so long as it helps them cut costs on paper for a few quarters).


          (As an aside: it’s the same difficulty text generators occasionally have with facts and citations: They can’t tell when it is important to have very specific combinations of words that map to very specific occurrences. It might have picked up the correlation of the word pattern “Words (Number), Words (something edition). Words.” with human names, year numbers, book titles and publisher respectively, but it can’t know why only specific combinations of author, year, existing book title and publisher are permissible.

          It may get them right often enough by picking a likely combination from texts related to the prompt, but unless you double check (or provide in advance) that citations refer to existing works and fit the cited content, you run the risk that it randomly generates bullshit. A student “writing” a paper might not be able to catch it, but a professor that knows the major authors and works of their field is probably gonna spot it.)

          • AnAmericanPotato@programming.dev
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            4 hours ago

            Yeah. The newer versions of Dall-E, GPT-Image, and similar cloud apps seem to have subnetworks specifically for text. They’re worlds better than they were just a year or two ago. Like, you can twist them into generating semi-coherent-looking text logos, or make a cartoon character wearing a T-shirt with some text on it.

            I’ve seen some complex pipelines with open models, where people train loras specifically to fix the things the base models suck at, like hands, text, etc.

            But it’s still a really dumb idea to generate a whole presentation slide or infographic that way, for a wide variety of reasons. If you ever get decent results, just consider yourself lucky. I mean, even the people with the skills to do this well (who are few and far between) would find it way more trouble than just, you know, making slides the normal way.

            The incompetence we keep seeing from Microsoft is staggering. I can only assume this is malicious compliance. I imagine some exec said “everyone needs to use AI for everything” and everyone below them said “okay you dumb fuck, here you go”.