New Delhi, 5 February (PTI) Union IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnav cited India’s Ultra Low -Caste Moon Mission Chandrayaan -3 to demonstrate the innovation capacity of the country to reduce the cost of AI development.
In a panel discussion with Openai CEO Sam Altman, the minister said that soon the government will come up with an open competition for startups to invite technical solutions that are looking for many government departments.
“Our young entrepreneurs, startups, researchers have actually focused on achieving the next level of innovation that will reduce the cost. Our country sent a mission to the moon at a fraction of cost which many other countries did. Why can we not do a part of the cost of many other countries?
India’s moon mission was Chandrayaan -3 value 600 crores while other countries have spent multiple dollars in search of the Moon.
After rejecting India’s ability to develop a low -cost basic model for AI like ALTMAN, CHATGHPT, now, now changed its views with progress in the field of AI and India has a potential leader in AI revolution Looks at
Vaishnav said that India is now working on the entire ecosystem of AI development, including building its own chipset, providing calculations at low cost as well as working on data sets, which is the language, Cultural and cultural and cultural and Indian contexts will be used to train models, cultural and cultural and cultural and regional nuances within the country etc.
The government is likely to provide Indian enterprises and startups access to the GPU (graphics processing unit) high -end computer, which is more than the cost of us at the cost of usD 1.6 towards us, which is $ 6 per hour for Indian firms. More than USD.
Altman said that the cost of an intelligence unit – a module in AI development – is gong to come down 10 times by the end of this year.
He said, however, the argument modules are not cheap and “it is still expensive to train them, but it is notable. I think it is really a really great creativity explosion and India is a leader there Needed”.
Connecting Altman’s talk, Vaishnav said that innovation can come from anywhere in the world to reduce the cost.
“Why shouldn’t it come from India? Our young entrepreneurs, our startups, our researchers, they really, really focus on achieving the next level of innovation that will reduce the cost,” he said.