Jim Keller: Most People Don't Think Simple Enough | AI Podcast Clips

431,769
0
Published 2020-02-10
Full episode with Jim Keller (Feb 2020):    • Jim Keller: Moore's Law, Microprocess...  
Clips channel (Lex Clips): youtube.com/lexclips
Main channel (Lex Fridman): youtube.com/lexfridman
(more links below)

Podcast full episodes playlist:
   • Lex Fridman Podcast  

Podcasts clips playlist:
   • Lex Fridman Podcast Clips  

Podcast website:
lexfridman.com/ai

Podcast on Apple Podcasts (iTunes):
apple.co/2lwqZIr

Podcast on Spotify:
spoti.fi/2nEwCF8

Podcast RSS:
lexfridman.com/category/ai/feed/

Jim Keller is a legendary microprocessor engineer, having worked at AMD, Apple, Tesla, and now Intel. He's known for his work on the AMD K7, K8, K12 and Zen microarchitectures, Apple A4, A5 processors, and co-author of the specifications for the x86-64 instruction set and HyperTransport interconnect.

Subscribe to this YouTube channel or connect on:
- Twitter: twitter.com/lexfridman
- LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman
- Facebook: www.facebook.com/lexfridman
- Instagram: www.instagram.com/lexfridman
- Medium: medium.com/@lexfridman
- Support on Patreon: www.patreon.com/lexfridman

All Comments (21)
  • @duytdl
    "An idiot loves complexity, a genius loves simplicity" - Terry Davis. God I wish he were alive to be interviewed!
  • @marc2377
    2:19 - "If you constantly unpack everything for deeper understanding you never get anything done. If you don't unpack and understand it when you need to, you'll do the wrong thing." Loved this, well said.
  • @sausage4mash
    loving Jim's Logical mind, he is so exact and to the point .
  • @iMPowering
    "Rewrite more often!" - Less about perfection, more about action, more synchronization to end user needs
  • @hypemugen
    The fun stops when you're about to rebuild an AI from scratch and it says: "no, don't worry, I got it"
  • @pierQRzt180
    00:00 start 00:38 difference from being able to follow a recipe and seeing the layers of complexity behind the recipe 01:28 When you get to be an expert at something you're hoping to achieve deeper understanding not just memorize a large set of recipes to go execute 02:15 if you constantly unpacked everything for deeper understanding you never get anything done , if you don't do deep understanding when needed, you will do the wrong thing. 03:30 the need of refactor and redesign to achieve a new local maximum since the previous one has plateaued. (every 3-5 years in a non-trivial project) 06:00 a project starts, improves and then improves through diminishing returns. Then refactor/redesign. The starting point will be lower than the past peak, but the peak will be higher. 06:30 Short term oriented business is not going to like redesign.
  • @xxxxx8200
    4:52 Lex: "So... where does the x86_64 standard come in? Or, how often do you..." Jim: "I was the co-author of that spec back in '98." Completely badass.
  • @AsifChauhan
    "If you really want to make a lot of progress in computer architecture, you should write one from scratch every 5 years" I'll keep it in my frontal lobe cortex in my next SW job, sir.
  • @Noircogi
    I've always expressed this as "Architecture beats optimization"
  • @kyleaider9867
    because they're praised for seeming smart, and we equate complexity with intelligence
  • @jseluisj
    Lex, I admire your tenacity and strong mindset! The community is growing, keep it up with the amazing work! I'm not kidding, I consider you as a mentor, even tho we never met. I guess this is the real magic of social media.
  • @variator7466
    I love how Jim is refering to human beings as "them"
  • @quantummath
    No beating around the bush, the practical objective reality, pure and "simple." (literally simple). Einstein once said, everything should be as simple as possible but not simpler. Jim Keller's thinking style is just that. Thanks to Lex and Jim Keller for the video.
  • @adamsmith3413
    My wife makes this point about surgery frequently...she performs surgical procedures that didn’t exist when she was a resident.
  • Thank you for hosting this discussion and sharing it with us. I hope you can keep finding such wonderful guests.
  • Lex, you and your guests have an undefinable knack of explaining something in a way that the average person can understand what is being explained- without actually understanding the entire topic. That is truly amazing. Thank you
  • One of the best videos, it’s what a lot of people have lost around the world. Details to basics. Losing what real living has to offer. Traversing through constant change rapidly. Major changes creating havoc. It happens on every level. The dangers of young not having a clear path.
  • @LukeAvedon
    The "Understanding vs Recipes" is so incredibly brilliant.