I’m not sure I see the distinction between your Type I and Type II.
The Type II constraints you list (compute availability, data, ideas (which may not be parallelizable), organizational overhead, testing and validation time) seem to apply to Type I also.
I think the distinction between Type I/II and Type III is meaningful (see here).
I’m not sure I see the distinction between your Type I and Type II.
The Type II constraints you list (compute availability, data, ideas (which may not be parallelizable), organizational overhead, testing and validation time) seem to apply to Type I also.
I think the distinction between Type I/II and Type III is meaningful (see here).
They do apply in some senses, but the difference is that in Type 1, the model itself is not modified and no new training is required.