Close Menu
Technology Mag

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    The Dangerous Decline in Vaccination Rates

    May 10, 2025

    Netflix’s ‘Moments’ Feature Lets You Easily Share Your Favorite Clips

    May 10, 2025

    Customs and Border Protection Confirms Its Use of Hacked Signal Clone TeleMessage

    May 10, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Subscribe
    Technology Mag
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • Home
    • News
    • Business
    • Games
    • Gear
    • Reviews
    • Science
    • Security
    • Trending
    • Press Release
    Technology Mag
    Home » 8 Google Employees Invented Modern AI. Here’s the Inside Story
    Business

    8 Google Employees Invented Modern AI. Here’s the Inside Story

    News RoomBy News RoomMarch 21, 20243 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email

    The last two weeks before the deadline were frantic. Though officially some of the team still had desks in Building 1945, they mostly worked in 1965 because it had a better espresso machine in the micro-kitchen. “People weren’t sleeping,” says Gomez, who, as the intern, lived in a constant debugging frenzy and also produced the visualizations and diagrams for the paper. It’s common in such projects to do ablations—taking things out to see whether what remains is enough to get the job done.

    “There was every possible combination of tricks and modules—which one helps, which doesn’t help. Let’s rip it out. Let’s replace it with this,” Gomez says. “Why is the model behaving in this counterintuitive way? Oh, it’s because we didn’t remember to do the masking properly. Does it work yet? OK, move on to the next. All of these components of what we now call the transformer were the output of this extremely high-paced, iterative trial and error.” The ablations, aided by Shazeer’s implementations, produced “something minimalistic,” Jones says. “Noam is a wizard.”

    Vaswani recalls crashing on an office couch one night while the team was writing the paper. As he stared at the curtains that separated the couch from the rest of the room, he was struck by the pattern on the fabric, which looked to him like synapses and neurons. Gomez was there, and Vaswani told him that what they were working on would transcend machine translation. “Ultimately, like with the human brain, you need to unite all these modalities—speech, audio, vision—under a single architecture,” he says. “I had a strong hunch we were onto something more general.”

    In the higher echelons of Google, however, the work was seen as just another interesting AI project. I asked several of the transformers folks whether their bosses ever summoned them for updates on the project. Not so much. But “we understood that this was potentially quite a big deal,” says Uszkoreit. “And it caused us to actually obsess over one of the sentences in the paper toward the end, where we comment on future work.”

    That sentence anticipated what might come next—the application of transformer models to basically all forms of human expression. “We are excited about the future of attention-based models,” they wrote. “We plan to extend the transformer to problems involving input and output modalities other than text” and to investigate “images, audio and video.”

    A couple of nights before the deadline, Uszkoreit realized they needed a title. Jones noted that the team had landed on a radical rejection of the accepted best practices, most notably LSTMs, for one technique: attention. The Beatles, Jones recalled, had named a song “All You Need Is Love.” Why not call the paper “Attention Is All You Need”?

    The Beatles?

    “I’m British,” says Jones. “It literally took five seconds of thought. I didn’t think they would use it.”

    They continued collecting results from their experiments right up until the deadline. “The English-French numbers came, like, five minutes before we submitted the paper,” says Parmar. “I was sitting in the micro-kitchen in 1965, getting that last number in.” With barely two minutes to spare, they sent off the paper.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleNeuralink video shows patient using brain implant to play chess on laptop
    Next Article Ikea releases a pair of affordable USB-C chargers

    Related Posts

    Donald Trump’s UK Trade Deal Could Secure Jaguar’s Resurrection

    May 9, 2025

    Singapore’s Vision for AI Safety Bridges the US-China Divide

    May 9, 2025

    A ‘Trump Card Visa’ Is Already Showing Up in Immigration Forms

    May 8, 2025

    OpenAI and the FDA Are Holding Talks About Using AI In Drug Evaluation

    May 8, 2025

    Amazon Has Made a Robot With a Sense of Touch

    May 7, 2025

    Trump’s Tariffs Are Threatening America’s Apple Juice Supply Chain

    May 7, 2025
    Our Picks

    Netflix’s ‘Moments’ Feature Lets You Easily Share Your Favorite Clips

    May 10, 2025

    Customs and Border Protection Confirms Its Use of Hacked Signal Clone TeleMessage

    May 10, 2025

    A review of Adidas’ entirely 3D printed Climacool sneakers

    May 10, 2025

    Samsung’s Galaxy Ring is on sale with a $100 gift card starting at $299.99

    May 9, 2025
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss
    News

    Donald Trump takes aim at more water and energy efficiency standards

    By News RoomMay 9, 2025

    Donald Trump signed a presidential memorandum Friday afternoon directing the Department of Energy to “consider…

    Google will pay a $1.375 billion settlement to Texas over privacy violations

    May 9, 2025

    Figma’s CEO on his new approach to AI

    May 9, 2025

    You can now use Apple Pay to buy games on your PS5

    May 9, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of use
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    © 2025 Technology Mag. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.