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On Wed, 17 Jul, 12:03 AM UTC
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[1]
Former OpenAI and Tesla exec Andrej Karpathy dives into education with AI-native school - SiliconANGLE
Former OpenAI and Tesla exec Andrej Karpathy dives into education with AI-native school Andrej Karpathy, a prominent artificial intelligence researcher who previously served as the head of AI at Tesla in between two stints at OpenAI, has announced plans to launch a new "AI-native" education startup. The computer scientist and occasional educator revealed the launch of Eureka Labs LLC in a post on X today, describing his new venture as a kind of "AI-native school". He explained that it will combine a traditional teacher with "AI symbiosis", with human expert-created course materials scaled and guided via AI teaching assistants. According to Karpathy, EurekaLabsAi represents the "culmination of my passion in both AI and education over ~2 decades...It's still early days but I wanted to announce the company so that I can build publicly instead of keeping a secret that isn't." Karpathy shared his belief that for students, the ideal experience is to learn under the guidance of a subject matter expert that is "deeply passionate, great at teaching, infinitely patient and fluent in all of the world's languages". But that ideal isn't realistic for every student, because those kinds of experts are generally one of a kind. As such, there aren't many of them and there definitely aren't enough to personally tutor all eight billion people in the world on demand, Karpathy said. However, generative AI gives us the opportunity to change that. With Eureka Labs, Karpathy envisages a future in which human teachers will still design the course materials, with AI teachers used to teach the actual courses. This will pave the way for an entire curriculum of courses to be made available on the same platform, Karpathy believed. "If we are successful, it will be easy for anyone to learn anything, expanding education in both reach (a large number of people learning something) and extent (any one person learning a large amount of subjects, beyond what may be possible today unassisted)," he said. To get the ball rolling, the company is planning to launch an AI course called LLM101n, which will teach students how to train their own AI model. Karpathy said the course materials will be made available online, but he also wants to run both digital and physical cohorts of students who can learn together. In response to a question on X asking about his plans to monetize the company, Karpathy said he wants Eureka Labs to become a "self-sustaining business", but at the same time, he doesn't want to "gatekeep educational content" either. So that suggests some kind of business model where the basic course materials are available to everyone for free, with some kind of premium features or experiences. Karpathy himself doesn't appear to be quite sure yet, saying that Eureka Labs' content will "most likely" be free and permissively licensed, and revenue derived from something else. Rather than make money, it seems Karpathy's ambition is to genuinely help everyone become more knowledgeable. "Eureka (from Ancient Greek εὕρηκα) is the awesome feeling of understanding something, of feeling it click," he posted in another reply. "The goal here is to spark those moments in people's minds." The reaction to Karpathy's post was extremely positive, with dozens of replies praising his initiative. Eureka Lab's X profile, which was only launched today, has already accumulated over 13,000 followers. Karpathy said Eureka Labs represents the culmination of his passions for both AI and education. He is no stranger to teaching, having taught a computer vision course at Stanford University until 2015, when he departed to co-found OpenAI with Elon Musk, Sam Altman and others. He left the AI firm two years later to head up Tesla's AI research team, helping to build the computer vision system that powers the Tesla Autopilot, an advanced driver assist system that relies on cameras to scan the car's surroundings. After leaving Tesla in 2022, Karpathy returned to OpenAI, where he helped develop and launch ChatGPT, which would go on to take the world by storm later that year, bringing global attention to the progress of the AI industry. Karpathy left OpenAI for the second time earlier this year, and throughout his time there and at Tesla, he has remained an educator. For instance, he currently teaches an online course called Neural Networks: Zero to Hero, instructing beginners on how to build neural networks. In addition, he also runs a YouTube channel where he occasionally posts lectures on AI-related topics.
[2]
Andrej Karpathy unveils Eureka Labs, an AI education start-up
The former Tesla executive said he wants to make it easier for anyone to learn anything using GenAI. OpenAI co-founder Andrej Karpathy has announced a new company called Eureka Labs that will help more students study a wide variety of subjects through its AI platform. The former director of AI and autopilot at Tesla wrote in a post on X yesterday (17 July) that Eureka Labs will be a "new kind of school that is AI native" and where an AI teaching assistant will "help guide students" through course materials designed by real teachers. "Unfortunately, subject matter experts who are deeply passionate, great at teaching, infinitely patient and fluent in all of the world's languages are also very scarce and cannot personally tutor all 8 billion of us on demand," Karpathy wrote. However, with recent progress in generative AI, this learning experience feels tractable ... This teacher + AI symbiosis could run an entire curriculum of courses on a common platform." The idea is to make it easy for anyone to learn anything - expanding both reach and extent, meaning that a large number of people will be able to learn a single subject and, equally, an individual person will be able to learn a large number of subjects. Karpathy is a computer scientist by background who founded OpenAI along with Sam Altman, Greg Brockman, Elon Musk and others back in 2015. Around the same time, he received a PhD in computer science from Stanford University. Karpathy went on to lead artificial intelligence and autopilot technology at Tesla in 2017, leaving the company in 2022. He then returned to OpenAI for a year, leaving the company in February this year to work on personal projects. He said at the time that his decision to leave the company is "not a result of any particular event, issue or drama". "Actually, being at OpenAI over the last year has been really great - the team is really strong, the people are wonderful, and the roadmap is very exciting, and I think we all have a lot to look forward to," Karpathy wrote on X. "My immediate plan is to work on my personal projects and see what happens. Those of you who've followed me for a while may have a sense for what that might look like." What that looks like is an AI course titled LLM101n that will be the first product at Eureka Labs, according to Karpathy's latest post. LLM101n is pitched as an undergraduate-level class that guides students through training their own AI, like a smaller version of the AI teaching assistant itself. "The course materials will be available online, but we also plan to run both digital and physical cohorts of people going through it together," he wrote. "Today, we are heads down building LLM101n, but we look forward to a future where AI is a key technology for increasing human potential. What would you like to learn?" Karpathy has been passionate about education and AI for a long time. He has previously made YouTube tutorials on Rubik's cubes, started a course on deep learning at Stanford, and most recently, created a video series on building neural networks in code from scratch. "All of my work combining the two so far has only been part-time, as side quests to my "real job", so I am quite excited to dive in and build something great, professionally and full-time," he wrote. "It's still early days but I wanted to announce the company so that I can build publicly instead of keeping a secret that isn't." Find out how emerging tech trends are transforming tomorrow with our new podcast, Future Human: The Series. Listen now on Spotify, on Apple or wherever you get your podcasts.
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OpenAI Founding Member Karpathy Launches AI Education Venture
One of OpenAI's founding members says he is launching an "AI native" school. Andrej Karpathy, who had been a key researcher for the company until February, announced Wednesday (July 17) his plans to launch Eureka, a venture that melds education and artificial intelligence (AI). "Unfortunately, subject matter experts who are deeply passionate, great at teaching, infinitely patient and fluent in all of the world's languages are also very scarce and cannot personally tutor all 8 billion of us on demand," Karpathy wrote on X (formerly Twitter). "However, with recent progress in generative AI, this learning experience feels tractable. The teacher still designs the course materials, but they are supported, leveraged and scaled with an AI Teaching Assistant who is optimized to help guide the students through them." The announcement was reported by Bloomberg News, which noted that Karpathy is a "significant figure" in the AI sector. He helped start OpenAI, and spent time with Tesla as the car maker's senior AI director. There, he oversaw the team behind its autopilot system, before going back to OpenAI, resigning in the winter to pursue personal projects. Karpathy's new venture follows a recent company launch by another ex-OpenAI executive: co-founder/former chief scientist Ilya Sutskever's Safe Superintelligence (SSI). This company, PYMNTS wrote last month, is focused on creating a safe and powerful AI system, a sign of another evolution from OpenAI's roots. "To understand Ilya Sutskever's new venture, consider the goals of OpenAI, the company he co-founded in 2015," that report said. "OpenAI aims to develop artificial general intelligence (AGI), a system that can rival human abilities. Their mission is to ensure that AGI benefits all of humanity, not just a select few." The company has two halves: the non-profit OpenAI, Inc. and its for-profit subsidiary OpenAI Global, LLC. The organization has been at the forefront of the ongoing AI boom, developing technologies such as advanced image generation models like DALL·E and the AI-enabled chatbot ChatGPT, and is often credited with kicking off the modern AI frenzy. OpenAI has received billions in investments from the likes of Microsoft -- its biggest benefactor -- allowing it to pursue its ambitious research goals and develop AI technology. "Despite its success, OpenAI has faced criticism for its shift toward a more commercial focus, with some experts arguing that the organization has strayed from its original mission of developing safe and beneficial AGI," PYMNTS wrote.
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Ex-OpenAI and Tesla engineer Andrej Karpathy announces AI-native school Eureka Labs
Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Any questions about what OpenAI and Tesla alum Andrej Karpathy might be cooking up next have been put to rest: The prominent AI researcher and computer scientist took to his account on X today to announce his new venture, Eureka Labs, which he described as a new kind of AI-native school. The company aims to provide a "teacher + AI symbiosis" where human expert-written course materials will be scaled and guided with an AI Teaching Assistant. As Karpathy wrote on X: "@EurekaLabsAI is the culmination of my passion in both AI and education over ~2 decades...It's still early days but I wanted to announce the company so that I can build publicly instead of keeping a secret that isn't." Expanding education in reach and extent The ideal experience for learning anything new, Karpathy noted, is under the guidance of subject matter experts who are "deeply passionate, great at teaching, infinitely patient and fluent in all of the world's languages." For instance, American physicist Richard Feynman would be the best possible teacher for a course on physics. But those types of experts "are very scarce and cannot personally tutor all 8 billion of us on demand," Karpathy noted. But with generative AI, this type of learning experience feels "tractable," he noted. With Eureka Labs, teachers will still design course materials while the AI Teaching Assistant will steer students through them, allowing an entire curriculum of courses to run on a common platform. "If we are successful, it will be easy for anyone to learn anything, expanding education in both reach (a large number of people learning something) and extent (any one person learning a large amount of subjects, beyond what may be possible today unassisted)," Karpathy forecasted. The company's first product will be the "world's obviously best AI course," LLM101n, he noted. The undergraduate-level class will help students train their own AI. The course materials will be available online, Karpathy noted, but Eureka also plans to run digital and physical cohorts of students running through the program together. When asked by a commenter on X whether the products would be available by subscription, free to all or a mix, Karpathy noted that he wants Eureka Labs to be "a proper, self-sustaining business, but I also really don't want to gatekeep educational content." Most likely, the content would be free and permissively licensed, he said, with the revenue coming from everything else -- such as running digital/physical cohorts. "Eureka (from Ancient Greek εὕρηκα) is the awesome feeling of understanding something, of feeling it click," he posted in a comment thread. "The goal here is to spark those moments in people's minds." Sharing 'a gift' Excitement for Karpathy's new venture is palpable; the announcement on X was met with tens of thousands of likes, comments, reposts and reactions, with users calling him a visionary, a gifted teacher and even the GOAT (greatest of all time). The company's X page, which launched today, already has nearly 10,000 followers (as of the posting of this story). "This is going to be so damn impactful!" exclaimed one user. Another commented: "Instead of going off onto an island and [counting] his fortune the man returns the promethean flame of wisdom and knowledge to the next generation." Sequoia Capital partner Shaun Maguire praised Karpathy for his "gift for teaching," adding, "thank you for sharing and scaling that gift!" Another X user gushed, "The most amazing contribution from you, @karpathy is going to be this. @EurekaLabsAI is going to be phenomenal. You are really one of the most distinguished selfless person." Finally at his 'real job' The OpenAI founding member and former Tesla AI scientist said his involvement in education transcended from "YouTube tutorials on Rubik's cubes" to CS231n at Stanford, a 10-week deep learning for computer vision course. He also leads an independent "Neural Networks: Zero to Hero" course on building neural networks from scratch. Karpathy noted that he has been involved in academic research, real-world products and AGI research throughout his career, but that all of his work has "only been part-time, as side quests to my 'real job,' so I am quite excited to dive in and build something great, professionally and full-time." After co-founding OpenAI in 2016, Karpathy initially left the then-nonprofit in 2017 to serve as senior director of AI at Tesla, where he led the computer vision team of Tesla Autopilot, according to his website. He then rejoined OpenAI in 2023 shortly after the earth-shaking release of ChatGPT, then departed the company again this February and has been a free agent ever since. At the time, he explained on X that his "immediate plan is to work on my personal projects and see what happens. Those of you who've followed me for a while may have a sense for what that might look like ;)" Karpathy earned his PhD from Stanford University under the tutelage of AI godmother Fei-Fei Li, focusing on convolutional/recurrent neural networks and their applications in computer vision, natural language processing (NLP) and their intersection. He also worked closely with venerable AI researcher Andrew Ng. The AI leader is no doubt passionate about the cross-section of AI and education, commenting: "We look forward to a future where AI is a key technology for increasing human potential."
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OpenAI Cofounder Andrej Karpathy Launches AI+Education Company Eureka Labs
The company's inaugural offering, LLM101n, is billed as "the world's obviously best AI course". Andrej Karpathy, a renowned figure in AI research and education, has announced the launch of his new venture, Eureka Labs, an AI+Education company dedicated to creating an AI-native learning environment. Eureka Labs aims to revolutionise education by integrating generative AI with traditional teaching methods. Karpathy, who previously held key positions at OpenAI and Tesla, unveiled Eureka Labs describing it as "a new kind of school that is AI native". He said," Unfortunately, subject matter experts who are deeply passionate, great at teaching, infinitely patient and fluent in all of the world's languages are also very scarce and cannot personally tutor all 8 billion of us on demand." Eureka Labs aims to revolutionise education by integrating generative AI with traditional teaching methods. The company's vision is to provide an ideal learning experience where students can interact with high-quality course materials, guided by AI Teaching Assistants optimized to aid in their learning journey. This approach seeks to make education more accessible and comprehensive, enabling anyone to learn anything. "This Teacher + AI symbiosis could run an entire curriculum of courses on a common platform. If we are successful, it will be easy for anyone to learn anything, expanding education in both reach (a large number of people learning something) and extent (any one person learning a large amount of subjects, beyond what may be possible today unassisted)," said Karpathy. The company's inaugural offering, LLM101n, is billed as "the world's obviously best AI course". This undergraduate-level class will guide students through the process of building their own AI model, specifically a "Storyteller AI Large Language Model" (LLM). Participants will learn to create, refine, and illustrate stories using their AI, while also developing a ChatGPT-like web application using Python, C, and CUDA. Karpathy explained that Eureka Labs is "the culmination of my passion in both AI and education over about two decades". He emphasised how this new venture builds upon his previous experiences, from creating YouTube tutorials on Rubik's cubes to launching the popular CS231n course at Stanford and his recent "Zero-to-Hero" AI video series. KAarpathy's experience spans academic research at Stanford, product development at Tesla, and AGI research at OpenAI. Eureka Labs represents Karpathy's full-time commitment to merging his passions for AI and education. "All of my work combining the two so far has only been part-time, as side quests to my 'real job', so I am quite excited to dive in and build something great, professionally and full-time," he said. The platform plans to offer course materials online and run both virtual and in-person cohorts. While initially focusing on AI education, Eureka Labs envisions expanding its curriculum to cover a wide range of subjects in the future. This new endeavor marks Karpathy's transition from part-time educational efforts to a full-time commitment to merging AI with education. As the field of AI continues to evolve rapidly, Eureka Labs aims to play a crucial role in democratizing AI education and preparing students for the future of technology.
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After Tesla and OpenAI, Andrej Karpathy's startup aims to apply AI assistants to education | TechCrunch
Andrej Karpathy, former head of AI at Tesla and researcher at OpenAI, is launching Eureka Labs, an "AI native" education platform. In tech speak, that usually means built from the ground up with AI at its core. And while Eureka Labs's AI ambitions are lofty, the company is starting with a more traditional approach to teaching. San Francisco-based Eureka Labs, which Karpathy registered as an LLC in Delaware on June 21, aims to leverage recent progress in generative AI to create AI teaching assistants that can guide students through course materials. Eureka Labs envisions AI assistants or personalities that would work with a human teacher to allow "anyone to learn anything," according to Karpathy, who posted the news on X. Teachers would still design the course material, but they'd be supported by this AI assistant. The startup does not yet appear to have built or tested the efficacy of integrating AI assistants into the classroom. At least one Georgia State University study found that AI teaching assistants helped some students get better grades. Karpathy's post points to a potential future where those assistants are based on real people - a la Meta's weird celebrity chatbots or Character AI's character chatbots. The post on X, which is mirrored on Eureka's bare bones new website, doesn't provide much information on this new startup, like whether this is just a MOOC with a chatbot or if this is a product that Karpathy would like to implement in, say, high schools. Karpathy didn't respond to TechCrunch's request for more information. Along with the post on X announcing the news, Karpathy included what is likely an AI generated image of a futuristic school, replete with a spaceship-like building, solar panels everywhere (even on the floor) and a smiling girl with...is that three hands? Despite stating that Eureka Labs aims to build AI teaching assistants, Karpathy also noted that the new venture's first product will be an AI course, LLM101n, an undergraduate-level class that will help students train their very own AI. This mini-me will be like a smaller version of the AI teaching assistant Eureka Labs hopes to build and scale, according to Karpathy. The AI pioneer wrote on X, and on Eureka's bare bones new website, that the course materials will be available online, and that the startup will run both digital and physical cohorts of people going through the materials together. The link for this AI course leads to a GitHub repository that hints at a different type of course than Eureka Labs is advertising - instead of "How to build an AI assistant," the link leads to a how-to for building a "Storyteller AI Large Language Model (LLM)." "Hand in hand, you'll be able [to] create, refine and illustrate little stories with the AI," reads the copy on the page. The class promises to teach eager AI students how to "build everything end-to-end from basics to a functioning web app similar to ChatGPT, from scratch in Python, C and CUDA, and with minimal computer science prerequisites." Whichever course Eureka Labs intends to introduce first, neither appears to be complete. A note posted on the GitHub page says the course will take time to build and there's no specific timeline. It's also unclear if Karpathy has self-funded Eureka Labs or has received backing from investors, and what the startup's business model is. There were no public filings of any investments related to Eureka Labs. The startup's LLC filing with California's Secretary of State is signed by Karpathy alone, and he hasn't divulged whether he's working with other high-profile leaders in the AI sector. Karpathy noted on X that Eureka Labs is the culmination of his passion in both AI and education over the last two decades. Karpathy taught deep learning for computer vision at Stanford University until 2015, when he left to co-found OpenAI. Two years later, Karpathy moved on to Tesla to head up the automaker's AI team, where he led the computer vision team of Tesla Autopilot. Autopilot is Tesla's advanced driving assistance system that relies on cameras to ingest environmental data and then perform certain driving tasks like cruise control and automatic steering. Karpathy left Tesla in 2022 and migrated back to OpenAI, where he led a small team related to ChatGPT. In February, the research scientist stepped down from his role at OpenAI, too. In both instances, Karpathy insisted that there was no drama or fallout that led to his decision to leave. Throughout his career at Tesla and OpenAI, Karpathy has continued to be an educator. He currently leads an online course called Neural Networks: Zero to Hero that helps students learn to build neural networks from scratch in code. Karpathy also has a YouTube channel where he semi-regularly posts lectures on LLMs and AI.
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Former OpenAI, Tesla Engineer Andrej Karpathy Starts AI Education Platform
(Reuters) - Computer scientist Andrej Karpathy announced on Tuesday that he was starting an AI-integrated education platform named Eureka Labs, leveraging years of experience at ChatGPT developer OpenAI and Tesla. Education platforms have taken advantage of the boom in generative artificial intelligence since the launch of ChatGPT in November 2022 to improve and create digital learning content. A teacher would design courses on the Eureka Labs platform, but they would be aided by an AI teaching assistant to guide students through the learning material, Karpathy said in a post on X. The company's first product is LLM101n, an undergraduate-level class that helps students train their own AI models similar to a scaled-down version of the teaching assistant. Karpathy was among the founding members of OpenAI in 2015 and, two years later, Tesla hired him to lead the company's autopilot division, building advanced driver assistance software. "Eureka Labs is the culmination of my passion in both AI and education over about 2 decades," Karpathy said in the post. Karpathy - who received a PhD from Stanford University - started posting tutorial videos on how to solve Rubik's cubes and over the years has published content online exploring concepts related to AI. (Reporting by Akash Sriram in Bengaluru; Editing by Alan Barona)
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Former OpenAI, Tesla engineer Andrej Karpathy starts AI education platform
July 16 (Reuters) - Computer scientist Andrej Karpathy announced on Tuesday that he was starting an AI-integrated education platform named Eureka Labs, leveraging years of experience at ChatGPT developer OpenAI and Tesla. Education platforms have taken advantage of the boom in generative artificial intelligence since the launch of ChatGPT in November 2022 to improve and create digital learning content. A teacher would design courses on the Eureka Labs platform, but they would be aided by an AI teaching assistant to guide students through the learning material, Karpathy said in a post on X. The company's first product is LLM101n, an undergraduate-level class that helps students train their own AI models similar to a scaled-down version of the teaching assistant. Karpathy was among the founding members of OpenAI in 2015 and, two years later, Tesla hired him to lead the company's autopilot division, building advanced driver assistance software. "Eureka Labs is the culmination of my passion in both AI and education over about 2 decades," Karpathy said in the post. Karpathy - who received a PhD from Stanford University - started posting tutorial videos on how to solve Rubik's cubes and over the years has published content online exploring concepts related to AI. (Reporting by Akash Sriram in Bengaluru; Editing by Alan Barona)
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Former OpenAI co-founder is building an AI-native school | Digital Trends
AI has been causing problems for schools and educational institutions ever since ChatGPT first launched, but a new education startup is embracing AI rather than resisting it. Mere months after departing OpenAI, which he helped found, AI researcher Andrej Karpathy announced the launch of his new "AI+Education" startup, dubbed Eureka Labs. Karpathy calls Eureka Labs a "new kind of school that is AI native," with the express aim of developing a "Teacher + AI symbiosis" that will allow "anyone to learn anything." He envisions an education system built from the ground up with AI as its core tenet, with human teachers developing lesson plans while being supplemented in the classroom by digital assistants. Recommended Videos "In the case of physics, one could imagine working through very high-quality course materials together with [theoretical physicist Richard] Feynman, who is there to guide you every step of the way," Karpathy wrote in his X post, echoing Steve Job's sentiments from 1985. "My hope is that, in our lifetimes," Jobs told an undisclosed dinner party crowd at the time, "we can make a tool of a new kind, an interactive client ... When the next Aristotle is alive, we can capture the underlying world view of that Aristotle in a computer. And someday a student will be able to not only read the words Aristotle wrote, but ask Aristotle a question. And get an answer." To accomplish this lofty goal, Eureka Labs plans to release LLM101n, an undergraduate-level course that teaches students how to build their own AI, in this case a pint-sized version of the company's full-fledged AI Teaching Assistant. It plans to release the course online and to implement instruction cohorts, both digitally and physically, for people to take it together. There's no word yet on what such a course could cost, when it will be available, or whether the company has yet studied the effectiveness of an AI-native teaching method. A 2022 study from Georgia State University suggests it could. Eureka Labs is entering an already crowded field, one that has grown exponentially since ChatGPT's initial release, and which UNESCO argues "has the potential to address some of the biggest challenges in education today, [and] innovate teaching and learning practices." Future AI-empowered learning aids could include AI-generated educational games, tailored specifically to each student's learning style and needs, adaptive learning platforms, intelligent digital tutors, and automated grading and feedback systems. Eureka Labs isn't alone in its pursuit of AI-first education. Google announced Gemini for Classroom just last month and AI apps like Caktus are specifically designed with students in mind.
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Former OpenAI, Tesla engineer Andrej Karpathy starts AI education platform
A teacher would design courses on the Eureka Labs platform, but they would be aided by an AI teaching assistant to guide students through the learning material, Karpathy said in a post on X. The company's first product is LLM101n, an undergraduate-level class that helps students train their own AI models similar to a scaled-down version of the teaching assistant. Karpathy was among the founding members of OpenAI in 2015 and, two years later, Tesla hired him to lead the company's autopilot division, building advanced driver assistance software. "Eureka Labs is the culmination of my passion in both AI and education over about 2 decades," Karpathy said in the post. Karpathy - who received a PhD from Stanford University - started posting tutorial videos on how to solve Rubik's cubes and over the years has published content online exploring concepts related to AI. (Reporting by Akash Sriram in Bengaluru; Editing by Alan Barona)
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Former OpenAI researcher's new company will teach you how to build an LLM
Karpathy's Eureka Labs will pair human-made curriculum with an AI-powered assistant. On Tuesday, former OpenAI researcher Andrej Karpathy announced the formation of a new AI learning platform called Eureka Labs. The venture aims to create an "AI native" educational experience, with its first offering focused on teaching students how to build their own large language model (LLM). Further Reading "It's still early days but I wanted to announce the company so that I can build publicly instead of keeping a secret that isn't," Karpathy wrote on X. While the idea of using AI in education isn't particularly new, Karpathy's approach hopes to pair expert-designed course materials with an AI-powered teaching assistant based on an LLM, aiming to provide personalized guidance at scale. This combination seeks to make high-quality education more accessible to a global audience. The platform's inaugural course, LLM101n, targets an undergraduate-level audience. It will walk students through the process of training an AI system called a "Storyteller AI Large Language Model" that will "create, refine and illustrate little stories." Eureka Labs will offer this course online at first, then through in-person groups in the future. Karpathy no stranger to AI education Karpathy's roots in AI go deep. In 2015, he received a PhD from Stanford University under computer scientist Dr. Fei-Fei Li. He was one of the founding members of OpenAI as a research scientist, then moved to Tesla to become its senior director of AI between 2017 and 2022. In 2023, Karpathy rejoined OpenAI for a year, departing in February. This new venture builds on Karpathy's track record of AI education. Over the past year, Karpathy has posted several highly regarded tutorials covering AI concepts on YouTube, including an instructional video about how to build an LLM from scratch, which currently has 405 million views. The videos have showcased his ability to break down complex topics for a broader audience. "@EurekaLabsAI is the culmination of my passion in both AI and education over ~2 decades," Karpathy wrote on X. "My interest in education took me from YouTube tutorials on Rubik's cubes to starting CS231n at Stanford, to my more recent Zero-to-Hero AI series. While my work in AI took me from academic research at Stanford to real-world products at Tesla and AGI research at OpenAI. All of my work combining the two so far has only been part-time, as side quests to my 'real job,' so I am quite excited to dive in and build something great, professionally and full-time." Eureka Labs' vision extends beyond its initial AI course, hinting at a broader curriculum that could span various subjects. "Today, we are heads down building LLM101n," the announcement reads, "but we look forward to a future where AI is a key technology for increasing human potential. What would you like to learn?"
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Andrej Karpathy, a prominent figure in AI development, has founded Eureka Labs, an AI-native school aimed at revolutionizing education through artificial intelligence. The venture seeks to address the growing demand for AI skills and knowledge.
Andrej Karpathy, a former executive at OpenAI and Tesla, has announced the launch of his new startup, Eureka Labs. This AI-native school aims to revolutionize education by leveraging artificial intelligence technologies 1. Karpathy's move into the education sector marks a significant shift in his career, bringing his extensive experience in AI development to the forefront of learning innovation.
Eureka Labs is positioned as an AI-first educational platform, designed to address the growing demand for AI skills and knowledge in the tech industry. The startup's primary focus is on providing comprehensive AI education, with its flagship course, LLM101, centered around large language models 2. This course aims to offer learners a deep understanding of the technologies driving the AI revolution.
What sets Eureka Labs apart is its unique approach to education. The platform utilizes AI technologies to create an immersive and interactive learning experience. Students will have the opportunity to engage with AI-powered tools and simulations, providing hands-on experience with cutting-edge AI systems 3. This practical approach is designed to bridge the gap between theoretical knowledge and real-world application of AI technologies.
The launch of Eureka Labs comes at a time when the demand for AI expertise is at an all-time high. With the rapid advancement of AI technologies, there is a growing need for professionals who can understand, develop, and implement AI solutions across various industries 4. Karpathy's venture is poised to play a crucial role in shaping the future workforce, equipping students with the skills necessary to thrive in an AI-driven world.
Andrej Karpathy brings a wealth of experience to Eureka Labs. As a founding member of OpenAI and the former director of AI at Tesla, he has been at the forefront of AI development for years 5. His expertise in machine learning, computer vision, and natural language processing makes him uniquely qualified to lead this educational initiative. Karpathy's reputation in the AI community is expected to lend credibility to Eureka Labs and attract both students and potential collaborators.
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Former OpenAI and Tesla engineer Andrej Karpathy announces plans to create a personalized AI tutor aimed at educating 8 billion students worldwide. The project seeks to revolutionize education through artificial intelligence.
2 Sources
OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, has hired Leah Belsky, former Chief Enterprise Officer at Coursera, as its first General Manager of Education. This move signals OpenAI's commitment to expanding its presence in the education sector.
2 Sources
OpenAI is developing plans to incorporate customized AI chatbots into online courses, aiming to revolutionize e-learning experiences. This move faces both enthusiasm and skepticism from educators.
2 Sources
OpenAI partners with Wharton and Common Sense Media to offer free AI courses for educators, aiming to enhance AI literacy and integration in classrooms. The initiative sparks debate on the benefits and concerns of AI in education.
11 Sources
Arizona's Unbound Academy, set to open with an AI-driven curriculum and no human teachers, ignites controversy over the future of education and the role of artificial intelligence in classrooms.
5 Sources