Simulating everything, sort of: The promise and limits of world models

37 pointsposted 5 days ago
by LorenDB

6 Comments

kinow

a day ago

I work in a project with a similar goal, I think, but that was not related to AI: climate digital twins. I worked on two, EDITO (European Digital Twin of the Ocean, edito.eu), and currently on DestinE ClimateDT (Destination Earth Climate Adaptation Digital Twin, https://destination-earth.eu/).

These digital twins aim to simulate climate, oceans, atmosphere, wind speed, temperature, etc., regionally or globally. They apply physics, mathematics, software engineering, and high-performance computing to simulate the world. Both digital twins I mentioned use EuroHPC resources like CSC LUMI, BSC MareNostrum5, CINECA Leonardo, and soon others (and we also use other smaller HPCs).

Now there are some ongoing work about integrating AI/ML, LLM, etc.. I find it a better approach than building for LLM/AI-first, as it integrates existing components, and allows for AI to be used too. I think this could possibly be integrated as a component in a solution like this described in the article, as a component.

(There are other digital twins, for heart, human body, cities, urban climate, rivers, biodiversity, etc.)

user

2 days ago

[deleted]

Lawyer24

2 days ago

This is good to know. I’ve been building a world. I’m starting to find more world builders

sandspar

2 days ago

Can you expand? You're building a world? In what mediums?

Lawyer24

a day ago

Basically it’s a Mercator map that tracks vessels and planes while displaying 3d models and their info. Also shows radio jamming, wave data, wind and hurricane data. Still drilling in better detail on the continents and even somewhat of a AI brain. https://github.com/jamalrfordii-arch/Vanguard-Map

Lawyer24

a day ago

Edit nvm I misunderstood