It's awful and a complete waste of time. I'm not sure if LLMs are getting good use yet / general chatbots are good or ready for business use.
You misery and wasted time is their improved stock price and bonus package.
There are some more advanced ones using ChatGPT now. I'm guessing they simply pre-prompt it. Can lead to funny results like a customer making the Chevy bot implement an algo in Python.
I think the problem is you haven’t shifted your mindset to using AI correctly yet.
Edit: More everyday examples from just the last 3 days
- Use carbide bits to drill into rocks. Googling “best bits for drilling rocks” doesn’t bring up anything obvious about carbide but it was the main thing chatGPT suggested.
- gave it dimensions for a barn I’m building and asked it how many gallons of paint I would need of a particular type. I could probably work that out myself but it’s a bunch of lookups (what’s the total sq footage, how many sq ft per gallon, what type of paint stands up to a lot of scuffing etc.)
- coarse threaded inserts for softwood when I asked it for threaded insert recommendations. I would have probably ended up not caring and fine threaded slips right out of pine.
- lookup ingredients in a face cream and list out any harms (with citations) for any of them.
- speeds and feeds for acrylic cutting for my particular CNC. Don’t use a downcut bit because it might cause a fire, something I didn’t consider.
- an explanation of relevant NEMA outlets. Something that’s very hard to figure out if you’re just dropped into it via googling.
clearly anyone trying to buy a car, which is already an ordeal with a human as is.
>I literally use ChatGPT 30 times a day
good for you? I use Google. mos of my queries aren't complex.
>Isn’t “this not good enough yet” line getting old?
as long as companies pretend 2024 AI can replace skilled labor, no. It's getting old how many more snake oil salesmen keep pretending that I can just use ChatGPT to refactor this very hot loop of performance sensitive code. And no ChatGPT, I do not have the time budget (real time) to hook into some distributed load for that function.
I'm sure in a decade it will wow me. But I prefer to for it to stay in its lane and I stay in mine for that decade.
>There nothing else that can estimate the number of cinder blocks I need to use for a project
is Calculus really this insurmontable feat to be defending big tech over? I'm not a great mathmatican, but give them excel/sheets and they can do the same in minutes.
>I can think of literally thousands of things I have asked that would have taken hours of googling that I can get an answer for in minutes.
I'm glad it works out for you. I'm more scrutinous in my searches and I see that about half the time its sources are a bit off at best, and dangerously wrong at worst. 50/50 isn't worth any potential time saved for what I research.
>I think the problem is you haven’t shifted your mindset to using AI correctly yet.
perhaps. But for my line of work that's probably for the best.
There is an indictment of AI "products" if I ever heard one
It’s like people that kept going to the library even with Google around. You’re not playing to the strengths of AI and relying on whatever suboptimal previous method you used to find the answers. It does really, really well with very specific queries with a lot of looks ups and dependencies that nothing else can really answer without a lot of work on your end.
And do you? Every time someone tried to show me examples of “how amazing ChatGPT is at reasoning”, the answers had glaring mistakes. It would be funny if it weren’t so sad how it shows people turning off their critical thinking when using LLMs, to the point they won’t even verify answers when trying to make a point.
Here’s a small recent example of failure: I asked the “state of the art” ChatGPT model which Monty Python members have been knighted (it wasn’t a trick question, I really wanted to know). It answered Michael Palin and Terry Gilliam, and that they had been knighted for X, Y, and Z (I don’t recall the exact reasons). Then I verified the answer on the BBC, Wikipedia, and a few others, and determined only Michael Palin has been knighted, and those weren’t even the reasons.
Just for kicks, I then said I didn’t think Michael Palin had been knighted. It promptly apologised, told me I was right, and that only Terry Gilliam had been knighted. Worse than useless.
I also usually follow most prompts with “look it up I want accurate information”
I had about 5-10 cinder blocks left over, not bad for an order of ~150