Anonymous wrote:Absolutely, yes. It's only with some personalities that are easy to influence. I own a business and work with a lot of other businesses. I'd say about 5% of business owners trust AI more than their people or experts they hire (like me). It's awful when that happens. Like Randy in Southpark.
Anonymous wrote:OP if you're being managed out of the office it's not because of your productivity.
Anonymous wrote:Do you work in a chicken factory OP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think I understand what you mean by pecking order. Aside from that, it wouldn't surprise me that if you can do things faster with the AI, the boss would expect you to be even more productive.
Funny little conversation I just had with an LLM. Turns out they are bad at turns of phrases. I used pecking order as in an "order that pecks" or the literal aggressive order with no other utility meant to establish a hierarchy. Whereas the LLM insists that a pecking order is a hierarchical system. It really didn't like this linguistic usage of a phrase in an unexpected context. I'm guessing some people would take issue with non-conventional uses of idioms, especially those that high light weakness in society. Apologies for any misunderstanding.
You can’t have a conversation with an LLM. It has no mind, so it can’t communicate. What you mean is, the random string of characters the LLM generated when you input a text string matched a description of what the phrase “pecking order” means.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think I understand what you mean by pecking order. Aside from that, it wouldn't surprise me that if you can do things faster with the AI, the boss would expect you to be even more productive.
Funny little conversation I just had with an LLM. Turns out they are bad at turns of phrases. I used pecking order as in an "order that pecks" or the literal aggressive order with no other utility meant to establish a hierarchy. Whereas the LLM insists that a pecking order is a hierarchical system. It really didn't like this linguistic usage of a phrase in an unexpected context. I'm guessing some people would take issue with non-conventional uses of idioms, especially those that high light weakness in society. Apologies for any misunderstanding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think I understand what you mean by pecking order. Aside from that, it wouldn't surprise me that if you can do things faster with the AI, the boss would expect you to be even more productive.
Funny little conversation I just had with an LLM. Turns out they are bad at turns of phrases. I used pecking order as in an "order that pecks" or the literal aggressive order with no other utility meant to establish a hierarchy. Whereas the LLM insists that a pecking order is a hierarchical system. It really didn't like this linguistic usage of a phrase in an unexpected context. I'm guessing some people would take issue with non-conventional uses of idioms, especially those that high light weakness in society. Apologies for any misunderstanding.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think I understand what you mean by pecking order. Aside from that, it wouldn't surprise me that if you can do things faster with the AI, the boss would expect you to be even more productive.