This is not an answer to the broader question, but just regarding the “no Wikipedia page” thing.
I would like to write a Wikipedia page about Flux, but as it is, there is very little quality information about it. We have a lot of anecdotal information about how to use it, and a little academic description of it, but that’s not enough.
Besides, it seems everyone who can write well in artificial intelligence wants to write their damned academic blog that is read by like 10 people a month and not Wikipedia, and Wikipedia accumulates a large amount of badly written stuff by amateurs.
The “Applications” section is a typical example of how stupid and badly formatted it is. Everything above it I wrote myself. Everything below it I only did a light amount of editing. Before I went in to write all of that in 2022-07 (2022! Imagine that! GANs were famous since about 2018 and it waited until 2022 to get a decent Wikipedia page?), the entire page was crap like it: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Generative_adversarial_network&oldid=1096565363
The RNN page is also terrible https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Recurrent_neural_network&oldid=1214097285 until I cleaned it up. There is still a large amount of crud but I put all of them in the lower half of the page, so that people know when to stop reading. I put them there just in case some annoyed editor reverts my edit for deleting their favorite section, and in case there is something valuable there (that I can’t be bothered to figure out, because of how badly written it is).
The list of crud goes on and on. The Convolutional Neural Network page is still absolutely terrible. It has a negative amount of value, and I’m too tired to clean it up.
Sometimes there’s an important model that’s entirely neglected. Like the T5 model series. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T5_(language_model) Why this model had to wait until me in 2024 to finally write it, I have no idea.
P.S.: The damned Transformer page gets someone (always a different one) writing in some Schmidhuber-propaganda. I remove it once a month. Why there are so many fans of Schmidhuber, I have no idea.
This is not an answer to the broader question, but just regarding the “no Wikipedia page” thing.
I would like to write a Wikipedia page about Flux, but as it is, there is very little quality information about it. We have a lot of anecdotal information about how to use it, and a little academic description of it, but that’s not enough.
Besides, it seems everyone who can write well in artificial intelligence wants to write their damned academic blog that is read by like 10 people a month and not Wikipedia, and Wikipedia accumulates a large amount of badly written stuff by amateurs.
As an example, see this page
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generative_adversarial_network
The “Applications” section is a typical example of how stupid and badly formatted it is. Everything above it I wrote myself. Everything below it I only did a light amount of editing. Before I went in to write all of that in 2022-07 (2022! Imagine that! GANs were famous since about 2018 and it waited until 2022 to get a decent Wikipedia page?), the entire page was crap like it: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Generative_adversarial_network&oldid=1096565363
Similarly for the Transformer. https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Transformer_(deep_learning_architecture)&oldid=1095579622 I have only recently finished writing it. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transformer_(deep_learning_architecture) and then I tried applying for “Good Article” status, and got promptly rejected for not putting enough inline citations (do they really want me to put inline citations everywhere even if that means I just have to refer to the Attention is All You Need paper 30 times?) and too much primary literature and too much arXiv links (not a peer-reviewed source).
The RNN page is also terrible https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Recurrent_neural_network&oldid=1214097285 until I cleaned it up. There is still a large amount of crud but I put all of them in the lower half of the page, so that people know when to stop reading. I put them there just in case some annoyed editor reverts my edit for deleting their favorite section, and in case there is something valuable there (that I can’t be bothered to figure out, because of how badly written it is).
The list of crud goes on and on. The Convolutional Neural Network page is still absolutely terrible. It has a negative amount of value, and I’m too tired to clean it up.
Sometimes there’s an important model that’s entirely neglected. Like the T5 model series. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T5_(language_model) Why this model had to wait until me in 2024 to finally write it, I have no idea.
P.S.: The damned Transformer page gets someone (always a different one) writing in some Schmidhuber-propaganda. I remove it once a month. Why there are so many fans of Schmidhuber, I have no idea.