• HanClinto 3 hours ago

    This is not as ridiculous as it looks.

    Using an enterprise-scale vector search database might feel a bit... silly? Overkill?

    But this is actually a brilliant illustration and application of some very fundamental concepts in machine learning and AI applications.

    "Vectorization" is the key concept here -- turning ones' input data (whether images or sales or service records or whatever) into a numerical representation such that meaningfully similar input data is converted into numerically similar vectors.

    Once you do that, all that's left is to do a nearest neighbor search, process or filter a bit, and voila -- now you're using AI and ML to build collectible card scanners or recommendation systems or heck -- even self driving cars (which is essentially what has been built here).

    Overall this example is elegant in its simplicity, and useful in that it showcases that -- if you can turn your input data into a decent vector somehow, that the rest is pretty straightforward.

    I've built several ML-based systems for commercial applications, and they all used vectorization + vector search in almost the exact same way as what is described here. Fantastic illustration for communicating such a powerful idea that can be applied in so many different ways.

    Well done!!

    • mtrofficus a day ago

      This is a funny project I made one evening: applying Image Search in Qdrant to play Mario Kart 64 using mupen64plus.

      • djmips 17 hours ago

        And then put up an article on a site requiring a login.

        • HanClinto 3 hours ago

          If you don't want to login, perhaps use an archive site?

          https://archive.ph/jFNxS

          • djmips 2 hours ago

            Thanks

          • mtrofficus 14 hours ago

            “on a site” referring to Medium xD. Welcome to 2024.