Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those of you who are using it for work tasks like emails and reports with some success, is there a program who like best? I think it’s a tool that I agree will probably separate the employee from the unemployed pretty soon. People have to be able to work quickly and efficiently. Of course they also have to be smart enough to edit/revise what AI gives them! But all the naysayers here sound, I don’t know, old! Thanks…
Jesus Christ, look at the quality of your own writing. Do we really think this person is capable of determining the quality of outputs from ChatGPT? It’s the blind leading the blind here, and we’re all going to be worse off.
Asked ChatGPT to critique your writing. It said:
Your sentence is mostly clear, but there are a few small adjustments that could enhance clarity and impact:
Tone and Word Choice: The phrase "it’s the blind leading the blind here" sounds slightly cliché and weakens the punch of your critique. Consider a more pointed analogy or phrase.
Pacing: The sentence structure feels a bit meandering. Breaking it into two parts could improve readability.
Specificity: The phrase "we’re all going to be worse off" could be more specific, reflecting exactly how the situation negatively impacts people.
Pronoun Shifts: The switch from "your" to "we" to "this person" is a bit jarring and can make the statement feel inconsistent. It’s unclear whether the speaker is addressing the person directly, speaking to an audience about that person, or both. This lack of consistency makes the message feel muddled.
Alternative Revision:
"Jesus Christ, look at the quality of your own writing. How can we expect someone like you to judge ChatGPT’s outputs accurately? It’s a train wreck waiting to happen."
What a great way to prove the PP's point. The chatgpt criticism is inaccurate (eg, with regard to pronouns) and the omission of "blind leading the blind" removes both context and impact.
Congrats, you drained a small pond somewhere to make that sentence worse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I use AI to write all the time, but I don't have AI do the writing. Because it will do it wrong.
But I use the AI bot embedded in Word to ask questions, get ideas, find synonyms, even think through a problem I'm having. I use it like a combination of a more convenient/efficient search engine and a coworker who will let me bounce ideas of them when I need to.
It has made me a more productive writer because when I'm working on something and hit a wall, instead of leaving my document and doing something else (including time wasters like looking at social media or playing a game on my phone, the stuff I used to do for procrastination) I just ask the AI chatbot how to push through. Like literally a fifth of my queries to the chatbot are stuff like "ugh I don't feel like finishing this section, how can I make myself do it?" And it will actually give me useful ways to do it. It's not groundbreaking stuff -- it will be like "some people find it useful to break up a piece of writing into smaller sections as a way to make it seem more manageable -- can you split the section up into sub-sections or paragraphs and just take them one by one?" Sure, that's something I should and can come up with on my own. But it's more effective when it comes from someone else!
I could never turn in work that I literally submitted AI to write. I'd feel ashamed. Also, I'm a control freak about my writing and I'd wind up going through and editing it and probably changing the whole thing. But as a tool to help me get my work done? Hell yes, I love it.
So AI is just a replacement for you accessing the extremely simple concepts you (should have) learned in middle school? You readily admit that you aren’t familiar with the concept of writer’s block or taking breaks? My kindergartener already knows about brain breaks.
Every example the folks in this thread give of the “power” of AI is just another data point proving the theory that it is a silky tool used exclusively by lazy idiots.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I use AI to write all the time, but I don't have AI do the writing. Because it will do it wrong.
But I use the AI bot embedded in Word to ask questions, get ideas, find synonyms, even think through a problem I'm having. I use it like a combination of a more convenient/efficient search engine and a coworker who will let me bounce ideas of them when I need to.
It has made me a more productive writer because when I'm working on something and hit a wall, instead of leaving my document and doing something else (including time wasters like looking at social media or playing a game on my phone, the stuff I used to do for procrastination) I just ask the AI chatbot how to push through. Like literally a fifth of my queries to the chatbot are stuff like "ugh I don't feel like finishing this section, how can I make myself do it?" And it will actually give me useful ways to do it. It's not groundbreaking stuff -- it will be like "some people find it useful to break up a piece of writing into smaller sections as a way to make it seem more manageable -- can you split the section up into sub-sections or paragraphs and just take them one by one?" Sure, that's something I should and can come up with on my own. But it's more effective when it comes from someone else!
I could never turn in work that I literally submitted AI to write. I'd feel ashamed. Also, I'm a control freak about my writing and I'd wind up going through and editing it and probably changing the whole thing. But as a tool to help me get my work done? Hell yes, I love it.
So AI is just a replacement for you accessing the extremely simple concepts you (should have) learned in middle school? You readily admit that you aren’t familiar with the concept of writer’s block or taking breaks? My kindergartener already knows about brain breaks.
Every example the folks in this thread give of the “power” of AI is just another data point proving the theory that it is a silky tool used exclusively by lazy idiots.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those of you who are using it for work tasks like emails and reports with some success, is there a program who like best? I think it’s a tool that I agree will probably separate the employee from the unemployed pretty soon. People have to be able to work quickly and efficiently. Of course they also have to be smart enough to edit/revise what AI gives them! But all the naysayers here sound, I don’t know, old! Thanks…
Jesus Christ, look at the quality of your own writing. Do we really think this person is capable of determining the quality of outputs from ChatGPT? It’s the blind leading the blind here, and we’re all going to be worse off.
Asked ChatGPT to critique your writing. It said:
Your sentence is mostly clear, but there are a few small adjustments that could enhance clarity and impact:
Tone and Word Choice: The phrase "it’s the blind leading the blind here" sounds slightly cliché and weakens the punch of your critique. Consider a more pointed analogy or phrase.
Pacing: The sentence structure feels a bit meandering. Breaking it into two parts could improve readability.
Specificity: The phrase "we’re all going to be worse off" could be more specific, reflecting exactly how the situation negatively impacts people.
Pronoun Shifts: The switch from "your" to "we" to "this person" is a bit jarring and can make the statement feel inconsistent. It’s unclear whether the speaker is addressing the person directly, speaking to an audience about that person, or both. This lack of consistency makes the message feel muddled.
Alternative Revision:
"Jesus Christ, look at the quality of your own writing. How can we expect someone like you to judge ChatGPT’s outputs accurately? It’s a train wreck waiting to happen."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This will be eye opening- try to think of 10 jobs/professions that won’t be either entirely eliminated or significantly impacted (to the point of dramatic RIFs) in the next 10 years.
It’s harder than you think.
Any of the skilled trades (plumbing, electrical, HVAC, carpentry, fabrication, maintenance/engineering) automotive/vehicle maintenance/repair, firefighting, policing, emergency medical response, commercial fishing, oil and gas drilling….
I think most traditional white collar or professional jobs will be eliminated by AI, but jobs that require human dexterity and problem solving in endlessly dissimilar scenarios will continue to be dominated by humans.
Bad luck for lawyers, doctors and accountants. Good luck for people who turn wrenches, screwdrivers, or fix things.
Speaking for lawyers and doctors (myself and family members), this is laughable. Lawyers are getting sanctioned for using AI.
Smdh
Lawyers will be one of the most replaced fields by A.I. as an A.I. program hooked to a laptop in the courtroom could monitor proceedings and review millions of cases in a microsecond to cite previous case law and raise objections before the human prosecution could even finish their leading statements.
Same for non-criminal lawyers as well, will be almost an extinction event.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those of you who are using it for work tasks like emails and reports with some success, is there a program who like best? I think it’s a tool that I agree will probably separate the employee from the unemployed pretty soon. People have to be able to work quickly and efficiently. Of course they also have to be smart enough to edit/revise what AI gives them! But all the naysayers here sound, I don’t know, old! Thanks…
Jesus Christ, look at the quality of your own writing. Do we really think this person is capable of determining the quality of outputs from ChatGPT? It’s the blind leading the blind here, and we’re all going to be worse off.
Anonymous wrote:I use AI to write all the time, but I don't have AI do the writing. Because it will do it wrong.
But I use the AI bot embedded in Word to ask questions, get ideas, find synonyms, even think through a problem I'm having. I use it like a combination of a more convenient/efficient search engine and a coworker who will let me bounce ideas of them when I need to.
It has made me a more productive writer because when I'm working on something and hit a wall, instead of leaving my document and doing something else (including time wasters like looking at social media or playing a game on my phone, the stuff I used to do for procrastination) I just ask the AI chatbot how to push through. Like literally a fifth of my queries to the chatbot are stuff like "ugh I don't feel like finishing this section, how can I make myself do it?" And it will actually give me useful ways to do it. It's not groundbreaking stuff -- it will be like "some people find it useful to break up a piece of writing into smaller sections as a way to make it seem more manageable -- can you split the section up into sub-sections or paragraphs and just take them one by one?" Sure, that's something I should and can come up with on my own. But it's more effective when it comes from someone else!
I could never turn in work that I literally submitted AI to write. I'd feel ashamed. Also, I'm a control freak about my writing and I'd wind up going through and editing it and probably changing the whole thing. But as a tool to help me get my work done? Hell yes, I love it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Asking AI for sources is really the worst use for it- AI does best when you load in a document and ask for a summary, talking points, etc.
It’s also great for first drafts of things that don’t matter that much, like an email.
I’ve also loaded standard operating procedures and asked for improvements or automations I can make in processes.
I’ve also used it to grab code to automate some current processes- something that I really did not have time to figure out before- it’s amazing, but it’s a tool, and you have to know how to use it properly.
I can see your point. At the same time, AI adds errors and mistakes. Checking for its mistakes takes as much time, or longer, than just doing the work myself from the start.
Not really? I’ve found high accuracy if I ask AI to summarize a document. It’s recognizing patterns in text at that point, not trying to generate answers. It saves an enormous amount of time. I can ask it to draft out a memo and it basically works as an outline that I can fill in and elaborate on.
It’s a tool, it’s not magical, and you have to know how to use it. You can’t treat it like voodoo or be overly reliant on it. The more you understand how it works, the more powerful it becomes for you.
Anyone who thinks AI is 1) actually AI and 2) a powerful tool is far too stupid to reliably check its output for accuracy.
I appreciate the concern! Luckily, some of us have mastered the delicate art of using tools and critical thinking. It’s a niche skill set, I know.
I went to an official Microsoft CoPilot training session on how to prompt AI.
They said you should include in the prompt things like "do not make up any of the information if you can't find an answer". In other words you can reduce hallucinating by telling the AI not to hallucinate. I didn't find that very comforting. But telling y'all now so it can be part of your elite niche skillset.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Asking AI for sources is really the worst use for it- AI does best when you load in a document and ask for a summary, talking points, etc.
It’s also great for first drafts of things that don’t matter that much, like an email.
I’ve also loaded standard operating procedures and asked for improvements or automations I can make in processes.
I’ve also used it to grab code to automate some current processes- something that I really did not have time to figure out before- it’s amazing, but it’s a tool, and you have to know how to use it properly.
I can see your point. At the same time, AI adds errors and mistakes. Checking for its mistakes takes as much time, or longer, than just doing the work myself from the start.
Not really? I’ve found high accuracy if I ask AI to summarize a document. It’s recognizing patterns in text at that point, not trying to generate answers. It saves an enormous amount of time. I can ask it to draft out a memo and it basically works as an outline that I can fill in and elaborate on.
It’s a tool, it’s not magical, and you have to know how to use it. You can’t treat it like voodoo or be overly reliant on it. The more you understand how it works, the more powerful it becomes for you.
Anyone who thinks AI is 1) actually AI and 2) a powerful tool is far too stupid to reliably check its output for accuracy.
I appreciate the concern! Luckily, some of us have mastered the delicate art of using tools and critical thinking. It’s a niche skill set, I know.
You can’t even write your own memos, dummy.
You sound like a man who just discovered spellcheck and took it personally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Asking AI for sources is really the worst use for it- AI does best when you load in a document and ask for a summary, talking points, etc.
It’s also great for first drafts of things that don’t matter that much, like an email.
I’ve also loaded standard operating procedures and asked for improvements or automations I can make in processes.
I’ve also used it to grab code to automate some current processes- something that I really did not have time to figure out before- it’s amazing, but it’s a tool, and you have to know how to use it properly.
I can see your point. At the same time, AI adds errors and mistakes. Checking for its mistakes takes as much time, or longer, than just doing the work myself from the start.
Not really? I’ve found high accuracy if I ask AI to summarize a document. It’s recognizing patterns in text at that point, not trying to generate answers. It saves an enormous amount of time. I can ask it to draft out a memo and it basically works as an outline that I can fill in and elaborate on.
It’s a tool, it’s not magical, and you have to know how to use it. You can’t treat it like voodoo or be overly reliant on it. The more you understand how it works, the more powerful it becomes for you.
Anyone who thinks AI is 1) actually AI and 2) a powerful tool is far too stupid to reliably check its output for accuracy.
I appreciate the concern! Luckily, some of us have mastered the delicate art of using tools and critical thinking. It’s a niche skill set, I know.
I went to an official Microsoft CoPilot training session on how to prompt AI.
They said you should include in the prompt things like "do not make up any of the information if you can't find an answer". In other words you can reduce hallucinating by telling the AI not to hallucinate. I didn't find that very comforting. But telling y'all now so it can be part of your elite niche skillset.
Copilot is generally pretty bad. I wouldn’t use it for work unless I were trying to pull some code to build a macro or something.
I think the fact that you feel informed after going to an “official Microsoft Copilot training” sort of tells us that you don’t know what’s going on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those of you who are using it for work tasks like emails and reports with some success, is there a program who like best? I think it’s a tool that I agree will probably separate the employee from the unemployed pretty soon. People have to be able to work quickly and efficiently. Of course they also have to be smart enough to edit/revise what AI gives them! But all the naysayers here sound, I don’t know, old! Thanks…
I use ChatGPT for 80% of tasks. Great for things like emails.
If you need better writing, Claude tends to be a little better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Asking AI for sources is really the worst use for it- AI does best when you load in a document and ask for a summary, talking points, etc.
It’s also great for first drafts of things that don’t matter that much, like an email.
I’ve also loaded standard operating procedures and asked for improvements or automations I can make in processes.
I’ve also used it to grab code to automate some current processes- something that I really did not have time to figure out before- it’s amazing, but it’s a tool, and you have to know how to use it properly.
I can see your point. At the same time, AI adds errors and mistakes. Checking for its mistakes takes as much time, or longer, than just doing the work myself from the start.
Not really? I’ve found high accuracy if I ask AI to summarize a document. It’s recognizing patterns in text at that point, not trying to generate answers. It saves an enormous amount of time. I can ask it to draft out a memo and it basically works as an outline that I can fill in and elaborate on.
It’s a tool, it’s not magical, and you have to know how to use it. You can’t treat it like voodoo or be overly reliant on it. The more you understand how it works, the more powerful it becomes for you.
Anyone who thinks AI is 1) actually AI and 2) a powerful tool is far too stupid to reliably check its output for accuracy.
I appreciate the concern! Luckily, some of us have mastered the delicate art of using tools and critical thinking. It’s a niche skill set, I know.
You can’t even write your own memos, dummy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Asking AI for sources is really the worst use for it- AI does best when you load in a document and ask for a summary, talking points, etc.
It’s also great for first drafts of things that don’t matter that much, like an email.
I’ve also loaded standard operating procedures and asked for improvements or automations I can make in processes.
I’ve also used it to grab code to automate some current processes- something that I really did not have time to figure out before- it’s amazing, but it’s a tool, and you have to know how to use it properly.
I can see your point. At the same time, AI adds errors and mistakes. Checking for its mistakes takes as much time, or longer, than just doing the work myself from the start.
Not really? I’ve found high accuracy if I ask AI to summarize a document. It’s recognizing patterns in text at that point, not trying to generate answers. It saves an enormous amount of time. I can ask it to draft out a memo and it basically works as an outline that I can fill in and elaborate on.
It’s a tool, it’s not magical, and you have to know how to use it. You can’t treat it like voodoo or be overly reliant on it. The more you understand how it works, the more powerful it becomes for you.
Anyone who thinks AI is 1) actually AI and 2) a powerful tool is far too stupid to reliably check its output for accuracy.
I appreciate the concern! Luckily, some of us have mastered the delicate art of using tools and critical thinking. It’s a niche skill set, I know.
I went to an official Microsoft CoPilot training session on how to prompt AI.
They said you should include in the prompt things like "do not make up any of the information if you can't find an answer". In other words you can reduce hallucinating by telling the AI not to hallucinate. I didn't find that very comforting. But telling y'all now so it can be part of your elite niche skillset.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. I know somebody who just chats at it all day like it's a person.
Look up "dead internet theory." It's the idea that most online interaction is by and for bots - not in the sentient sense, but in the sense of AI text is designed to appeal to search engines, which then promote it. It's circular.
I didn't know that concept had a name, yet I've been wondering about the circular aspect of this. On a related note, my AI essay could be graded by a robot one day (and AI teacher, let's say). Then, my AI gunk is graded by more AI gunk, and what is the point of that??
OP