ChapGPT Open AI

Wonder what else I can use it for. hmm
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It's actually surprising what you can use this tool for. I was very skeptical at first, and thought it would be a trend which would fade away. But I think it's here to stay. The more people I talk to about it they are using it help them in some way.

What got me interested was talking to a buddy of mine who works in communications and uses it to refine his writing. This lead me to try it out, and I've been exploring it for all kinds of business needs and website stuff, and just now I literally created a online photo gallery website.
 
It's actually surprising what you can use this tool for. I was very skeptical at first, and thought it would be a trend which would fade away. But I think it's here to stay. The more people I talk to about it they are using it help them in some way.

What got me interested was talking to a buddy of mine who works in communications and uses it to refine his writing. This lead me to try it out, and I've been exploring it for all kinds of business needs and website stuff, and just now I literally created an online photo gallery website.
I started using it to proofread emails about a year ago, now I use it instead of Google for looking things up.

It’s not always correct with facts as a lot of stuff appears to be from internet searches. But it’s way easier than sifting thru mountains of interweave trash.

A good example for me was doing a 12v conversion on my Yamaha moped. 50 websites with complex instructions for rewriting stators, swapping in coils from this and that… I spent hours looking for a simple conversion tutorial. I asked ChatGPT ‘give me a schematic to convert a QT50 to 12v”.

It returned simple schematic with wire colours , and a parts list. The conversion took 10 minutes
 
I use it to proofread my emails and work messages because I want to sound professional but still keep it casual. Sometimes, I ask it to make my writing a bit friendlier or to use everyday phrases that aren’t always my go-to.

When it comes to work processes, I know a bit about writing VBA commands, M-language, and Python, but I’m no expert. I usually jot down what I want to achieve, and the tool writes the code for me. It does have its share of errors, but my basic knowledge helps me fix things up.

A different case scenario is while studying for the CPA certification. I found that the examples in the material didn’t always cut it, so I asked for more. In more ocassions that not it has helped to understand some advanced financial concepts. Like others have said, I spotted a few mistakes in their calculations and the accounting or tax treatment on certain things, but I kind of expected that.
 
My students use it. Their emails all look the same if they do. I pay attention to the ones that actually thought about what they write. If they use it for homework I'll give their marks to ChatGPT instead.

AI bots won’t tell you that they don’t know, they are excellent liars and you risk using/quoting absolute rubbish if you rely on them.

Quite a few mushroom poisonings have occurred now for example from people asking “is this edible”.

AI has its uses, making us lazy and losing skills isn't one of them.
 
I already started you using the pronoun You refering to ChatGPT. Can you make a workout program.
Funny thing I had use google AI to confirm talking in ther 1 st person meant. Using one AI to use to explain my interaction with another AI.
Wait a minute isn't interaction used commonly describing action between people not things. Got to seperate the two. Don't think it's healthy.
 
You will more and more you can use it for with daily work tasks. I have no defined tasks but use it regularly. I have found numerous tasks that come up that I can have AI do, or at least give me info on with clients PDF's that have literally saved me hours in a day when these come up. Those types of thing warrant the monthly cost.
 
I’ve used ChatGPT to edit papers , improving grammar and adding clarity . There is tremendous upside and a very frightening downside IMO. Stock analysts can use it to predict stock values running thousands of possible algorithms in minutes instead of days . Hollywood has an AI possible action film star that would not need a million dollar pay day or all the green M&Ms taken out of the bowl .


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Language Learning - just tell it to switch to Spanish (for example), and ask it to correct errors, offer new words, and suggest better ways to sound like a native speaker. Then switch to the mic and talk to her - amazing! I’m surprised it’s still free...
 
Language Learning - just tell it to switch to Spanish (for example), and ask it to correct errors, offer new words, and suggest better ways to sound like a native speaker. Then switch to the mic and talk to her - amazing! I’m surprised it’s still free...
All the data collecting they are processing is worth it to someone.

If things keep going the way they are, I feel these Ai models will upend google. I think people are getting tired for searching for stuff and ending up with a bunch of trash links rigged for ranking more then useful content. Where as Ai can do the search and return a useful result with references.
 
All the data collecting they are processing is worth it to someone.

If things keep going the way they are, I feel these Ai models will upend google. I think people are getting tired for searching for stuff and ending up with a bunch of trash links rigged for ranking more then useful content. Where as Ai can do the search and return a useful result with references.
The other part of that is for quite a while, there have been a lot of search results in google that seem to be generated based on your search (eg. you search for a part number and there is a BS website that has the part number, some plausible text related to the equipment it came from, etc). I'm not sure if those are AI or some simpler generation algorithm to draw in unsuspecting victims.

As for AI providing references, Good luck. AI is great for creating things that look plausible but are complete BS. More often than not, that is what is created. Always personally look at the references from an external source to ensure it exists and says what AI says it does. Normally it does not even exist.
 
The other part of that is for quite a while, there have been a lot of search results in google that seem to be generated based on your search (eg. you search for a part number and there is a BS website that has the part number, some plausible text related to the equipment it came from, etc). I'm not sure if those are AI or some simpler generation algorithm to draw in unsuspecting victims.

As for AI providing references, Good luck. AI is great for creating things that look plausible but are complete BS. More often than not, that is what is created. Always personally look at the references from an external source to ensure it exists and says what AI says it does. Normally it does not even exist.

Students get a bit startled when they find out their AI written paper that contained references didn’t actually include real references at times. They were made up to look real. I go to search them and they don’t exist.

Over reliance on AI is responsible for people claiming certain things as factual when the opposite is true at times. I may use it for simple tasks but anything that's remotely complex or that requires careful checking is going to be done the old fashioned way to save looking dumb.

Like I said before, AI is a very very convincing liar sometimes.
 
Students get a bit startled when they find out their AI written paper that contained references didn’t actually include real references at times. They were made up to look real. I go to search them and they don’t exist.

Over reliance on AI is responsible for people claiming certain things as factual when the opposite is true at times. I may use it for simple tasks but anything that's remotely complex or that requires careful checking is going to be done the old fashioned way to save looking dumb.

Like I said before, AI is a very very convincing liar sometimes.
Online arguments (especially on facebook) have an army of people snipping AI arguments as proof to support their point. I haven't seen a single one that was accurate and supported by facts yet. For instance, AI will say something is illegal and it clearly isn't although many people believe it is. If something is illegal, it should be easy to provide a reference to the actual law that is being broken. AI makes very believable text that is not connected with reality.
 
Students get a bit startled when they find out their AI written paper that contained references didn’t actually include real references at times. They were made up to look real. I go to search them and they don’t exist.

Over reliance on AI is responsible for people claiming certain things as factual when the opposite is true at times. I may use it for simple tasks but anything that's remotely complex or that requires careful checking is going to be done the old fashioned way to save looking dumb.

Like I said before, AI is a very very convincing liar sometimes.

We're in a sweet spot where AI is able to harvest good quality data from real people who have contributed opinions, facts and ideas in good faith.

Moving forward, this pool of data is going to poisoned by the addition of both AI-generated content itself (which has already outpaced information generated by real people), and bad actors looking to corrupt the data with compromised or incorrect information. Like making a copy of a copy, every generation starts to degrade.

Starting to see this with AI-generated images where they are now trying to isolate source data from date ranges that precede AI-generated content. The sheer amount of AI slop you see on YouTube and DeviantArt is going to be the tip of the iceberg moving ahead.

My opinion is that pre-2022 data is going to hold a very valuable position, with validated and verified social media accounts and data from that era being coveted and also being ripe targets for hacking.
 
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