I think it should be quite obvious that perceptrons are far from the smallest units that are capable of learning. They store many bytes of information, require a non-local update process, need numeric (i.e. symbolic) inputs and involve relatively complex computations. You can go much simpler. For example:
I think Karpathy's microgpt blogpost is the best in this genre in a long time, and it also includes a multi layer perceptron. It's a step up in the hierarchy, so reading both is helpful, of course.
I'm not sure if I'd like to declare a best. There are so many different approaches and I think their ability to inform is cumulative,
I like the ability of this article to do the tiny training runs in browser. It makes the point of a bias clear. Too many tutorials get sucked into the proof of zero times anything is zero. Everyone knows that. What you should show is where that mstters in the problem at hand.
3blue1brown does one of the best depictions of why we need an activation function.
Karpathy's videos are a little tougher for a beginner to grasp, but excel at solving a complete problem. I knew all of the theory behind what it takes to make micrograd before I made my own by following the video, but what you get from doing it can't be understated.
It's hard to describe but it what you learn is more of a feel than pure knowledge. It gives you a better sense of knowing when the principles apply in other circumstances.
Perhaps it's the distinction of understanding how springs and gears work, then looking at a clock and understanding how the gears and springs move the hands. There's still more needed if you want to make a clock. And that stuff is what let's you also make a wind up toy.
In the early days of machine learning (before the first AI winter), networks like this were often implemented and trained in hardware: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ADALINE
That was the first thing that came to mind when I read "the smallest brain you can build". Nowadays, that "small brain" would likely be built on a breadboard using op-amps instead.
Amazing and anachronistic to see something like that from 1960. And then it makes me wonder why there wasn't more progress on neural nets being used for many things prior to the 21st century. (I haven't read the history of the AI winters but I have heard of them)
> why there wasn't more progress on neural nets being used for many things prior to the 21st century
They were simply too computationally expensive to train for the limited things they could do. It wasn’t until we had the ability to train large neural networks on commodity hardware that things really took off.
The IF statement is the root creator of software programming. It has the ability to compare two values against each other and branch out to blocks of instructions. So it is perceiving (reading), decision making and routing - all that which differentiate life from inanimate objects. The AI agents perform the exact same loop, by delegating the first two steps to a model.
Going further backwards, the transistor (or a PNP junction) is the hardware level enabler of the IF statement. The action (switching) driven by the current which in turn controls other switches, is the first manifestation of "observe and act" by inanimate things at the speed of electricity.
Mechanical equivalents existed ofcourse - speed of a governer which controls the flow of fuel which in turn controls the speed of the governer.
> Going further backwards, the transistor (or a PNP junction) is the hardware level enabler of the IF statement. The action (switching) (..)
Back up a bit please! Analog computing is a thing. And it isn't even new - not by a long shot.
There are good reasons why practically all computing today is the digital kind. But electronic 'equivalents' of neural nets is one area where analog might make sense. Adding inputs can be as simple as a bunch of resistors + a transistor. Even on modern silicon nodes, that might be a more efficient setup than digital inputs, N-bit adders/multipliers etc. Not saying that's the case, and AI hardware should be based on analog circuitry. But it could be, and perhaps found to be practical.
So, what if, we build a stack/set of transistors in same shape as a trained model? It would eliminate most of the software stack too and should run very fast. No memory/gpu required, the chip acts as both storage and processing device, purpose built to be physical model of a trained model.
There’s lots of things you can do in hardware that could be done in software but cost. FPGA should have solved this long ago, but apparently the guys who own the IP want to make it as hard as possible to use it …
The alternative IF expression or statement, in the form introduced by John McCarthy in 1958 (which he used in early 1959 to define his version of AND, OR and NOT), is one of the possible primitives for computation.
There exist several equivalent sets of primitive operations. While the sets containing only NAND or only NOR, or both AND and NOT or both OR and NOT are more notorious, these logical operations are more abstract and they do not indicate precisely a hardware implementation, i.e. there are many distinct hardware methods to make such logical gates.
Other sets of primitive operations map directly to hardware devices, e.g. the sets of primitive operations composed of maximum and complement or of minimum and complement map directly to a hardware implementation using rectifier diodes and inverting amplifiers (which can be made with either semiconductor devices or with vacuum tubes, or also with pneumatic or hydraulic devices).
Other sets of primitive operations are obtained by replacing the maximum or minimum circuits with series or parallel connections of switches, like in the CMOS logic that is nowadays dominant.
The alternative IF expression corresponds in hardware to a 2-way multiplexer, which, together with the 2 constant functions "0" and "1" (a.k.a. "false" and "true" or "low voltage" and "high voltage"), is sufficient for a complete set of computational primitives.
Besides those mentioned above, the main remaining variant for a complete set of computational primitives consists of an analog (possibly weighted) adder and an analog comparator, which had been used in the so-called RTL circuits (resistor-transistor logic) and which also corresponds to perceptrons. RTL had been used in some early integrated circuits, before being replaced by DTL and TTL circuits (which are based on minimum and complement functions).
In hardware, e.g. in RTL circuits, a combined analog adder+comparator can be made with a single high-gain amplifying device, together with a set of weighting resistors and a bias resistor. RTL circuits can implement complex logic with fewer devices (e.g. they can implement a neural network in the analog domain), but they were replaced during the sixties of the past century with DTL, then TTL, because those were faster (in RTL, the resistors limit the charging currents for input capacitors and parasitic capacitors, which slows down the logical transitions) and the fact that they needed more devices was not important, due to the quick increase in circuit density.
This reminds me of a book, whose title I forget, about creating a compact set of knowledge that will enable us to "rebuild civilization from scratch" in case of a future/fictional post-collapse scenario. I sometimes wonder, given the immense complexity and global supply-chain dependencies of our computing stack, whether we could bootstrap from first principles something of equivalent power and expressivity, but orders of magnitude simpler.
There's a wide variety of computational primitives, including lambda calculus, combinators, cellular automata, rewriting systems. Perhaps some are more practical to implement in hardware, particularly the kind of DIY electronics or analog machines that can also be put together from scratch. It might look like a whole building of mechanical switches, powered by a water wheel ("watermill"), for example.
I think if civilization collapses they'll have other priorities, and very little benefit to get from the effort required for such simpler computing, for a good while...
If you want to learn the fundamentals of ML I recommend a book, such as Deep Learning: Foundations and Concepts by Chris Bishop. If you insist on staying online, one option is https://course.fast.ai/
If you don't know ML I don't think you're going to learn much through ad hoc demos.
>I wish I was smart enough to hold it all together.
I used to have a wife, but they took her in the divorce!
The human mind isn't very good at correlating its contents[0]. You can "know" something for years without realizing its implications.
The human mind traverses its knowledge like a man with a small flashlight in total darkness. Our beam of attention is small and narrow, so you need to put the right things in it, or the magic doesn't happen.
This has important implications for learning. I don't know what they are though.
Probably something like, "you can know something without knowing what it means." You haven't connected it to the things it's supposed to be connected to yet. I don't know how to fix that though. (Something involving the Feynman technique, maybe?)
I didn't know Bishop had released a new textbook. I will have to take a look at it. I wasn't the biggest fan of his Pattern Recognition book as I found it overly dense. I much preferred the Murphy and Alpaydin books.
I still find his pattern recognition book useful and informative. It may be dense, but some of us consider that a positive for 'reference' literature. That book was one of very few that still holds up well fr when it was published - truly in on of the last "dark ages" of ML.
I think those down voting you are perhaps overly eager. I upvoted. Grab "Deep Learning" - you'll find it useful, imteresting, and likely less 'dense' in the negative sense!
Appreciate your comment. I skimmed the online version and it covers all the 2010s era developments all the way to Transformers which is enough to earn it a spot on my bookshelf.
> Grab "Deep Learning" - you'll find it useful, imteresting, and likely less 'dense' in the negative sense!
I know you're joking, but if you really wanted to, you can if you have a network of these, since you can build NAND gates from perceptrons. If you have NAND gates, then you can build any other gates from these and then you can build a computer [1].
https://medium.com/@VictorBanev/the-simplest-learning-machin...
This is a description of a 5-line algorithm that learns and stores approximate probability of an event using just 1 byte of persistent memory.
https://karpathy.github.io/2026/02/12/microgpt/
I like the ability of this article to do the tiny training runs in browser. It makes the point of a bias clear. Too many tutorials get sucked into the proof of zero times anything is zero. Everyone knows that. What you should show is where that mstters in the problem at hand.
3blue1brown does one of the best depictions of why we need an activation function.
Karpathy's videos are a little tougher for a beginner to grasp, but excel at solving a complete problem. I knew all of the theory behind what it takes to make micrograd before I made my own by following the video, but what you get from doing it can't be understated.
It's hard to describe but it what you learn is more of a feel than pure knowledge. It gives you a better sense of knowing when the principles apply in other circumstances.
Perhaps it's the distinction of understanding how springs and gears work, then looking at a clock and understanding how the gears and springs move the hands. There's still more needed if you want to make a clock. And that stuff is what let's you also make a wind up toy.
That was the first thing that came to mind when I read "the smallest brain you can build". Nowadays, that "small brain" would likely be built on a breadboard using op-amps instead.
They were simply too computationally expensive to train for the limited things they could do. It wasn’t until we had the ability to train large neural networks on commodity hardware that things really took off.
Tl;dr - compute was the bottleneck.
I am not associated with this channel/video, just love it. I’ve shared it here before.
[0] https://youtu.be/glWvwvhZkQ8?si=XjcwWWy43305tl6O
Going further backwards, the transistor (or a PNP junction) is the hardware level enabler of the IF statement. The action (switching) driven by the current which in turn controls other switches, is the first manifestation of "observe and act" by inanimate things at the speed of electricity.
Mechanical equivalents existed ofcourse - speed of a governer which controls the flow of fuel which in turn controls the speed of the governer.
Back up a bit please! Analog computing is a thing. And it isn't even new - not by a long shot.
There are good reasons why practically all computing today is the digital kind. But electronic 'equivalents' of neural nets is one area where analog might make sense. Adding inputs can be as simple as a bunch of resistors + a transistor. Even on modern silicon nodes, that might be a more efficient setup than digital inputs, N-bit adders/multipliers etc. Not saying that's the case, and AI hardware should be based on analog circuitry. But it could be, and perhaps found to be practical.
It's the same thing as stimulus, response.
Unchanging in response to circumstances is static.
Changing in the absence of circumstances is randomness.
The conditional is all that remains. Changing in response to circumstances
(Arguably, unchanging in the absence of circumstances completes the truth table, but it's a whole lot of nothing)
Try it, it's llama 3.1 8B at 16000 tokens per second.
chatjimmy.ai https://taalas.com/the-path-to-ubiquitous-ai/
There exist several equivalent sets of primitive operations. While the sets containing only NAND or only NOR, or both AND and NOT or both OR and NOT are more notorious, these logical operations are more abstract and they do not indicate precisely a hardware implementation, i.e. there are many distinct hardware methods to make such logical gates.
Other sets of primitive operations map directly to hardware devices, e.g. the sets of primitive operations composed of maximum and complement or of minimum and complement map directly to a hardware implementation using rectifier diodes and inverting amplifiers (which can be made with either semiconductor devices or with vacuum tubes, or also with pneumatic or hydraulic devices).
Other sets of primitive operations are obtained by replacing the maximum or minimum circuits with series or parallel connections of switches, like in the CMOS logic that is nowadays dominant.
The alternative IF expression corresponds in hardware to a 2-way multiplexer, which, together with the 2 constant functions "0" and "1" (a.k.a. "false" and "true" or "low voltage" and "high voltage"), is sufficient for a complete set of computational primitives.
Besides those mentioned above, the main remaining variant for a complete set of computational primitives consists of an analog (possibly weighted) adder and an analog comparator, which had been used in the so-called RTL circuits (resistor-transistor logic) and which also corresponds to perceptrons. RTL had been used in some early integrated circuits, before being replaced by DTL and TTL circuits (which are based on minimum and complement functions).
In hardware, e.g. in RTL circuits, a combined analog adder+comparator can be made with a single high-gain amplifying device, together with a set of weighting resistors and a bias resistor. RTL circuits can implement complex logic with fewer devices (e.g. they can implement a neural network in the analog domain), but they were replaced during the sixties of the past century with DTL, then TTL, because those were faster (in RTL, the resistors limit the charging currents for input capacitors and parasitic capacitors, which slows down the logical transitions) and the fact that they needed more devices was not important, due to the quick increase in circuit density.
There's a wide variety of computational primitives, including lambda calculus, combinators, cellular automata, rewriting systems. Perhaps some are more practical to implement in hardware, particularly the kind of DIY electronics or analog machines that can also be put together from scratch. It might look like a whole building of mechanical switches, powered by a water wheel ("watermill"), for example.
A transistor (driven to saturation) is a much better model.
I played with similar approach in JavaScript and built a NanoNeuron https://github.com/trekhleb/nano-neuron (it is more verbose than Python though)
> In 1958, a researcher named Frank Rosenblatt built a machine *he called* the perceptron.
> It was *inspired* by a single brain cell, a neuron.
I included a remark about how time travellers would find Rosenblatt a better target than Miles Dyson.
I was never quite sure on how close, or over, the line that was on appropriateness. It was definitely thought provoking.
and its an a great learning resource - which is arguably more important :-)
If you don't know ML I don't think you're going to learn much through ad hoc demos.
(before numarray and numpy merged!)
I used to have a wife, but they took her in the divorce!
The human mind isn't very good at correlating its contents[0]. You can "know" something for years without realizing its implications.
The human mind traverses its knowledge like a man with a small flashlight in total darkness. Our beam of attention is small and narrow, so you need to put the right things in it, or the magic doesn't happen.
This has important implications for learning. I don't know what they are though.
Probably something like, "you can know something without knowing what it means." You haven't connected it to the things it's supposed to be connected to yet. I don't know how to fix that though. (Something involving the Feynman technique, maybe?)
[0] H.P. Lovecraft quote - https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/193944-the-most-merciful-th...
EDIT: His son is co-author?
I think those down voting you are perhaps overly eager. I upvoted. Grab "Deep Learning" - you'll find it useful, imteresting, and likely less 'dense' in the negative sense!
> Grab "Deep Learning" - you'll find it useful, imteresting, and likely less 'dense' in the negative sense!
Absolutely! I just ordered it and it's enroute :)
f(x) = 0.
[1] https://www.nand2tetris.org/
https://www.dandwiki.com/wiki/Doom_(5e_Campaign_Setting)