Ars AI headline experiment finale—we came, we saw, we used a lot of compute time

Ars AI headline experiment finale—we came, we saw, we used a lot of compute time

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images)

We may have bitten off more than we could chew, folks.

An Amazon engineer told me that when he heard what I was trying to do with Ars headlines, the first thing he thought was that we had chosen a deceptively hard problem. He warned that I needed to be careful about properly setting my expectations. If this was a real business problem... well, the best thing he could do was suggest reframing the problem from "good or bad headline" to something less concrete.

That statement was the most family-friendly and concise way of framing the outcome of my four-week, part-time crash course in machine learning. As of this moment, my PyTorch kernels aren't so much torches as they are dumpster fires. The accuracy has improved slightly, thanks to professional intervention, but I am nowhere near deploying a working solution. Today, as I am allegedly on vacation visiting my parents for the first time in over a year, I sat on a couch in their living room working on this project and accidentally launched a model training job locally on the Dell laptop I brought—with a 2.4 GHz Intel Core i3 7100U CPU—instead of in the SageMaker copy of the same Jupyter notebook. The Dell locked up so hard I had to pull the battery out to reboot it.

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