What's next for AI agentic workflows ft. Andrew Ng of AI Fund

2024 ж. 25 Нау.
223 913 Рет қаралды

Andrew Ng, founder of DeepLearning.AI and AI Fund, speaks at Sequoia Capital's AI Ascent about what's next for AI agentic workflows and their potential to significantly propel AI advancements-perhaps even surpassing the impact of the forthcoming generation of foundational models.
#AI #AIAscent #Sequoia #Startup #Founder #entrepreneur

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  • its so soothing to hear andrew ng's voice. brings me back to my coursera ML and DL courses

    @stephennfernandes@stephennfernandesАй бұрын
    • starting from forecasting the house price🤣always in my mind.

      @christopherchen4920@christopherchen4920Ай бұрын
    • The misery of Qwiklabs

      @Gringohuevon@GringohuevonАй бұрын
  • Brilliant. The only thing I would add is that with inference speeds offered by Groq, it’s not necessary to wait minutes anymore. Fast inference speeds have the most value when humans aren’t reading the output.

    @matthew_berman@matthew_bermanАй бұрын
    • Groq is on ZeroBot if you ever wanna share some thoughts 😉

      @zerobot_tech@zerobot_techАй бұрын
    • Yup, I was wondering what the value is with Groq (like do we really need inference that fast) but agentic worfklows have provided a solid use-case

      @ravisawhney3111@ravisawhney3111Ай бұрын
  • It's nice to see Andrew finally be impressed by something! A lot of his previous talks were along the lines of how AI can't do anything yet and it's not nearly capable, etc.

    @reza2kn@reza2knАй бұрын
  • Thank you Andrew Ng for certifying me 🙌

    @zerobot_tech@zerobot_techАй бұрын
  • 00:01:03 AI agents: Iterative, agentic workflows enhance performance. 00:04:29 Reflective agents: Self-assessment improves code quality iteratively. 00:09:22 Multi-agent collaboration: Diverse agents boost complex program generation. 00:12:01 Fast token generation: Rapid token output crucial for iterative workflows. 00:13:21 AGI journey: Agent workflows propel progress in AI development.

    @ReflectionOcean@ReflectionOceanАй бұрын
    • Prompt your AI to be more concise They have a tendency for verbosity

      @HuxleyCrimson@HuxleyCrimsonАй бұрын
  • Andrew Ng as always great!

    @bonadio60@bonadio60Ай бұрын
  • I use this method of agentic workflow for coding in school, with brainstorming, and detailed pseudo steps, then review it, then stich somethings together, and have it revise itself. Then after a few cycles, I give it a request using words like "magnificent," or "swe professional point of view," and other things along those lines. Which ends up give me a better product by the final iteration. I am a Sophomore CS student, and I'm glad I am doing the method right, when I'm practicing data structures. Thanks for explaining the method of what I have been doing Andrew Ng.

    @TonyKingOfTheOzone@TonyKingOfTheOzoneАй бұрын
    • Can u share your workflow

      @jatingupta4708@jatingupta4708Ай бұрын
    • Do you have a blog, youtube channel or x account?

      @hl236@hl236Ай бұрын
    • @@jatingupta4708 I would, but I feel I would need to give like a step process, that would have other bubbles next to bubbles for things to consider. If you give me a few days, Ill give you a generic image generated host paint of my workflow.

      @TonyKingOfTheOzone@TonyKingOfTheOzoneАй бұрын
    • @@hl236 I only use KZhead and disc for 99% of interactions. I have a git hub with student work I've done, but its nothing special, as its just college freshman and sophomore projects, keep building yall.

      @TonyKingOfTheOzone@TonyKingOfTheOzoneАй бұрын
    • Excellent humble brag!

      @enjoful@enjofulАй бұрын
  • It is always a pleasure to hear Andrew!! :)

    @nachoeigu@nachoeiguАй бұрын
  • Interesting talk on AI Agent, Andrew Ng. More updates on this subject will help. 🌞👏👏

    @adtiamzon3663@adtiamzon3663Ай бұрын
  • Agree 100%. To reach AGI/ASI will require agentic workflows.

    @ThinkAI1st@ThinkAI1stАй бұрын
  • Mind-blowing... THANK YOU, Andrew! Great talk.

    @Ikels@IkelsАй бұрын
  • Hi guys, This is an excellent talk. I watched the Andrej one as well. And it seems that these talks are really focused and talk about real problems. So kudos to the team for executing on this. Its WAY WAY BETTER than these large conference interviews where you don't learn anything

    @pratikkhedikar6759@pratikkhedikar6759Ай бұрын
    • They're also short and straight to the point! This would normally get stretched out to 30m

      @thesadboxman@thesadboxmanАй бұрын
    • the anthropic one was not good imo, but the mistral one was good as well

      @cesarromerop@cesarromeropАй бұрын
    • @@thesadboxman true

      @pratikkhedikar6759@pratikkhedikar6759Ай бұрын
    • @@cesarromerop ohh is it...i didnt checkout the anthropic one....will do

      @pratikkhedikar6759@pratikkhedikar6759Ай бұрын
    • Not limited to this event, I wonder what other talks stand out to you. I am trying to learn as much as I can about this space from experts. Many thanks

      @faraimazhandu3806@faraimazhandu3806Ай бұрын
  • This is going to change development radically. Imagine being able to just write workflows to write tons of code based on what functionality we want while modulating interconnectedness, dependencies and other finer details and nuances which humans understand and A.I. does not. Just the best of human and ai combining to increase productivity. Excited for the future.

    @yashpatel261@yashpatel261Ай бұрын
    • Absolutely. There will always be a human in charge, but insanely more productive. (We are helping LLM devs with that human intervention part)

      @gotoHuman@gotoHumanАй бұрын
  • Fascinating. I'll experiment with agentic workflows for my product. I really like the idea of getting more out of GPT3 using rag and these techniques.

    @hl236@hl236Ай бұрын
  • Great insights as always and I admire AndrewNG explain the advance tech explained in super simple manner !

    @ayyanarjeyakrishnan6471@ayyanarjeyakrishnan6471Ай бұрын
  • Practical overview and feedback of what works and doesn't, very nice

    @user-bd8jb7ln5g@user-bd8jb7ln5gАй бұрын
  • Absolutely outstanding talk! Outstanding!

    @danieljbukowski@danieljbukowskiАй бұрын
  • I'm watching you from age 16, GOAT AI teacher!!!!

    @Sirius_2780@Sirius_278028 күн бұрын
  • Great talk! More videos like this please!

    @philipdante@philipdanteАй бұрын
  • Thanks for sharing!

    @sankeerth1729@sankeerth1729Ай бұрын
  • Great talk - thanx for sharing! Are the slides available for download?

    @ralfdmueller@ralfdmuellerАй бұрын
  • Clip #2 [4:26-6:16] I love how Dr Ng humbly describes his work as laying down another brick on the golden road to AGI.

    @ZenBen_the_Elder@ZenBen_the_ElderАй бұрын
  • The AI legend, I can't forget how easy was learning complext deep learning stuff by just taking Andrew Ng's courses

    @waelaburezeq4641@waelaburezeq4641Ай бұрын
  • great talk!

    @DeepCreativeAI@DeepCreativeAIАй бұрын
  • I just did a quick test of this by customizing GPTs how I would like it to respond , its a good fame work , but i dont think its truly agentic . "Define the Goal: Be specific and measurable. What is the desired outcome of this workflow? Identify Key Milestones: Break down the overall goal into major checkpoints or phases. Flexible Action Steps: For each milestone, brainstorm a variety of potential actions that could move you forward. Avoid a rigid, sequential task list - these actions are options to choose from. Evaluation and Iteration: Determine how you'll measure progress towards milestones and the overall goal. Build in regular checkpoints for assessment. Be prepared to adapt actions, milestones, and even the goal itself based on results. Key Principles Outcome Focus: Prioritize reaching your goal over following a precise plan. Adaptability: Embrace change and be willing to pivot your actions as needed. Empowerment: This framework aims to give you agency and decision-making power within the process."

    @eado9440@eado9440Ай бұрын
  • Very nice. Now I want to see how I can use agentic workflows.

    @AudioDestinyHQ@AudioDestinyHQАй бұрын
  • I am a big Fan Of Sir Andrew Ng❤

    @SandeepMR26@SandeepMR26Ай бұрын
  • Really enjoyed this

    @abcthegreat1@abcthegreat1Ай бұрын
  • That’s gold!

    @victorhenriquecollasanta4740@victorhenriquecollasanta4740Ай бұрын
  • Great stuff.

    @joshismyhandle@joshismyhandleАй бұрын
  • Great presenatation -)

    @micbab-vg2mu@micbab-vg2muАй бұрын
  • The Legend!

    @dropacid8@dropacid8Ай бұрын
  • Love the analogy of the proverbial manager checking every 5 mins after assigning a task 🙃

    @sandeepvk@sandeepvk27 күн бұрын
  • How do I get started?

    @j0hannes5@j0hannes5Ай бұрын
  • Take a shot every time he says "sometimes it doesn't work, sometimes it's amazing" 😅

    @elderpinzon7686@elderpinzon7686Ай бұрын
  • I LOVE AI Agents... but I'm left wondering: Why hasn't anybody developed a system/app that takes the API's from the top LLMs, created agents for each, and then have these agents all work together to brainstorm, debate, review, and solve problems? I often get 4 different answers from 4 LLMs, so why not have them all setup as agents "in one room" working together to come up with the "best" solution. I can't find anybody that's tried this... why not? Wouldn't having the "top minds" (LLMs) working together produce better results?

    @Nifty-Stuff@Nifty-StuffАй бұрын
  • in a way , conceptually, the critic and coder roles are some sort of MoE for LLMs....

    @paraskevasparaskevas350@paraskevasparaskevas350Ай бұрын
  • Guys! Make sure to check out the papers he lists at 11:07! It is required reading for the exam 🙂

    @Treegrower@TreegrowerАй бұрын
  • "Maybe you do, I can't do that" 2:39 😆😆

    @waytolegacy@waytolegacy15 күн бұрын
  • This agentic workflow sounds very much like parsing through iterative phases of collaborative problem solving, that is assumed to be captured in the massive data sets parsed by the networks.

    @richardlee3253@richardlee325319 күн бұрын
  • I am 54 this year coding for 3 decades, been using prompt engineering to create my code for last 2 months using multiple GPTs and thought it was the best, but this agentic loop will make programmers legacy, being slow and expensive In the next 6 months these workflows will improve, the rise of AI agents will be here whether we like it or not I advice knowledge workers to prepare for this financially, physically, mentally and emotionally This will be fast, we will be like deer looking at headlights

    @rommellagera8543@rommellagera8543Ай бұрын
    • most knowledge worker are not even aware of AI at all. They will just wake up one day and their job is gone.

      @chillmegachill@chillmegachillАй бұрын
  • The world has made AI loud enough but still its directions should be geared to gain the right progress.

    @user-vj4sn1hk3n@user-vj4sn1hk3nАй бұрын
  • agentic workflows will be come the best way to AGI

    @zeyuliu4226@zeyuliu4226Ай бұрын
  • The core challenge here is that LLM fails at multi-step planning - and there is no way to guarantee that iterative Reflection bring correct solution (and optimal) in short period of time and money

    @avatarcybertronics2584@avatarcybertronics2584Ай бұрын
  • To me this approach feels a bit like computer vision before neural networks took over. Hand coding feature detectors etc. That’s what you’re doing when you hand-design a workflow like “do web search, gather sources, write first draft, critique first draft” etc. These hardcoded agent flows are too rigid to produce good results generally. The models will learn to construct their own flows just like a person can. So while people might have some success building agents like this now, I think it’s a bit of a dead end that will be overtaken by foundational models.

    @ashh3051@ashh3051Ай бұрын
    • Prompt instructions vs zero shot will always be a balancing act that depends on use case. Give too many instructions and you'll nerf the llm. Don't give instructions or use rag and you it will output responses that are low value and not actionable. However the value of an llm will always depend on a user's ability to ask the right questions. If Elon musk gave you 30min of his time the value will depends on what you ask him.

      @hl236@hl236Ай бұрын
    • What he's saying is AI agents of the future will barely resemble the LLMs we have now

      @whoislewys3546@whoislewys3546Ай бұрын
    • They'll be more autonomous and not just chatbots we can prompt@@whoislewys3546

      @gotoHuman@gotoHumanАй бұрын
  • 3:08 - what's the difference between "Reflection" and "Reflexion"? English is not my first language.

    @marcusfonseca6673@marcusfonseca6673Ай бұрын
    • Reflection is the correct word. Reflexion is a term created by the researchers, with a self-reflection methodology where the LLM reflects on the previous answers to improve it.

      @rafaelfigueroa2479@rafaelfigueroa2479Ай бұрын
    • @@rafaelfigueroa2479 merci beaucoup

      @marcusfonseca6673@marcusfonseca6673Ай бұрын
    • you can also reflect on something. Reflect on the past and reevaluate thighs etc

      @RR-et6zp@RR-et6zpАй бұрын
  • Very good talk. I was only distracted by the guy with the restless leg syndrome in the front row. He must have been even more distracting to Andrew, who despite that delivered an awesome talk!

    @krawlak@krawlakАй бұрын
  • How might agentic workflows transform industries beyond coding, like semiconductors?

    @AdvantestInc@AdvantestIncАй бұрын
    • none, other than further increasing the demand for semiconductor products in data centers

      @laxboi97@laxboi97Ай бұрын
    • You could hook up an agent to Verisim and a 3D printer and tell it build better chips for itself

      @whoislewys3546@whoislewys3546Ай бұрын
  • you want that instant gratif... euuhhh search result :D

    @ramzio9155@ramzio9155Ай бұрын
  • What's the difference between "Agent" and "Agentic workflow"? Will Agent include agentic workflow?

    @soleverlee317@soleverlee31722 күн бұрын
  • i thought GPT-3.5 is dumb. then Andrew pulled up chart agentic 3.5 beat GPT-4 .

    @balubalaji9956@balubalaji9956Ай бұрын
  • Andrew should've been mayor :(

    @mattkenefick@mattkenefickАй бұрын
  • 10/10

    @arthurphiladelpho@arthurphiladelphoАй бұрын
  • "sometimes it works, sometimes it does not"

    @VPopkins@VPopkinsАй бұрын
  • Been doing AI agents operating in async workflows commercially for about 30 years. About time peeps catch up

    @angstrom1058@angstrom1058Ай бұрын
  • : whats your real name?

    @AnupamAnandresultorientation@AnupamAnandresultorientationАй бұрын
  • Americans hate to admit it but we've been under such a closed system for so long to the point our public education stopped enriching young minds 40 yrs ago and flipped into recruiting for agency & institutions taking away the most productive years from our workforce. It's been 90 years since we was in a very open private sector individual owners and operator creative posture. Everyone is a cog in the wheel more or less. We have so many grandfathered in economic middle men over the many phases of steam engine until today. Unlike most of the world that only individualized the past 50 years after the transitor age it leaves the west and America with many extra left over obstacles. It also leaves debts paid up front that have helped us get to this technology. Since I've retired and lived through all that 1900s, structuralism costs classical American decendants its only fair to remind everyone what these are from random Joe's perspective. Family birthrates ,18-30 year Olds trained up and entering workforce at the most creative and productive ages ( which by default tends to marry & help Maintain the elusive American prosperity) and the lack or loss of 31 -50 year old owner operators of local American infrastructure. Yes it's an unsustainable theme here that's been a very hefty price in building out our world over the 80 years of the transitor age. If any sectors are handed advantages in this new paradigm infrastructure, these are the ones who have paid the ultimate cost in my lifetime. New paradigm infrastructure where balance is there for better quality of life and at minimum restoration of all that's been compromised. We have so antiquated ways of doing things . Our city's are still under top down rule prohibition era reformed control mechanisms

    @dadsonworldwide3238@dadsonworldwide323817 күн бұрын
  • Ng

    @sergismael@sergismaelАй бұрын
  • Pretty funny in 2024 how "the cutting edge of computing technology" and "writing scripts for cute AI NPCs" are more or less the same thing :)

    @rpbmpn@rpbmpnАй бұрын
  • I will be happy if I get a B 😂

    @noswag5773@noswag5773Ай бұрын
  • He still not explain why he gave b to that poor kid

    @manyes7577@manyes757723 күн бұрын
  • dont uae what you just heard

    @AnupamAnandresultorientation@AnupamAnandresultorientationАй бұрын
    • why

      @williamwong8424@williamwong8424Ай бұрын
  • What a lame introduction!

    @tvm73836@tvm73836Ай бұрын
  • This was useless. No real content. Just guesstimations of very vague trends. Just say "Agent Models can wow you, sometimes.", without providing any details or how to build them or what tools to use. - saved your 13 minutes.

    @HideBuz@HideBuzАй бұрын
  • I love Andrew Ng but he has a tendency to speak with an “uptalk” inflection which makes him sound immature and lose his credibility and gravitas. Please Dr. Ng, uptalking is cringey unless you’re an insecure teenager.

    @jcwfh@jcwfhАй бұрын
    • Wait, who sounds like an "insecure teenager"? Yikes

      @benjpac5@benjpac5Ай бұрын
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