> Question for the group here: do we honestly feel like we've exhausted the options for delivering value on top of the current generation of LLMs?
Certainly not.
But technology is all about stacks. Each layer strives to improve, right up through UX and business value. The uses for 1µm chips had not been exhausted in 1989 when the 486 shipped in 800nm. 250nm still had tons of unexplored uses when the Pentium 4 shipped on 90nm.
Talking about scaling at the the model level is like talking about transistor density for silicon: it's interesting, and relevant, and we should care... but it is not the sole determinent of what use cases can be build and what user value there is.
Certainly not.
But technology is all about stacks. Each layer strives to improve, right up through UX and business value. The uses for 1µm chips had not been exhausted in 1989 when the 486 shipped in 800nm. 250nm still had tons of unexplored uses when the Pentium 4 shipped on 90nm.
Talking about scaling at the the model level is like talking about transistor density for silicon: it's interesting, and relevant, and we should care... but it is not the sole determinent of what use cases can be build and what user value there is.