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A firm providing AI drive-thru tech to fast food chains actually relies on human workers to take orders 70% of the time
(www.businessinsider.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
One would think that by now, these companies would have built up enough training data to no longer require human intervention?
Is their existing "AI" tech just your usual old chatbot, except with a STT and TTS so it's usable at a drive thru? The article only mentions that they started recently using ChatGPT to assist with speech recognition... so unless I missed it, there's no mention of their current tech using LLMs at all - just another company trying to climb on board the AI hype train ๐คฆโโ๏ธ
Good. People in countries who aren't so well off shouldn't be exploited as cheap & disposable call center labor IMO.
Not using a LLM is clearly a mistake.
I bet if you provided ChatGPT the menu along with the spoken text it would figure it out no problem.
I guess the STT is a bigger issue.
Sorry, as an AI language model I am not capable of preparing food for you.