Wow great to see this type of thinking on paper. Months ago I built a script that accepts an input topic and creates an entire book in under 2 minutes. It first generates the book outline with chapters. Then, for each chapter it creates subheadings. Then, it writes content for each subheading at the same time. Nice video!
Suggestion: THe sound volume it's a little low to the average of most youtube videos, you could apply some simple compressions processing that will improve it a lot.
Wow great to see this type of thinking on paper. Months ago I built a script that accepts an input topic and creates an entire book in under 2 minutes. It first generates the book outline with chapters. Then, for each chapter it creates subheadings. Then, it writes content for each subheading at the same time. Nice video!
I absolutely love these run throughs, would be great to see more 👍
amazing video! would be great to see some more examples of how to build custom chains using LCEL
Skeleton of Thought: So, Harrison does a video demonstrating his own Skeleton of Thinking on the Fly.
The happiness at 22:02 :D
Suggestion: THe sound volume it's a little low to the average of most youtube videos, you could apply some simple compressions processing that will improve it a lot.
Great 🎉
Is it possible to run the point_expander_chain in parallel on the list of input mappings? I would think RunnableParallel does the job but it doesnt.
Would this be applicable to a RAG approach?
what keyboard are you typing on?
A.I OS diagram🤣🤣. Seems Andrej Karpathy sent us all in the same direction
Lcel is weirdly complex and very difficult to understand…..
I thought so before, but now I feel very comfortable with it. It is a very nice way of chaining things.
@@ojilee oh interesting...how did you go from finding it difficult to easy..?
Hi, make Pydantic v2 default
Why pycharm?