Anonymous wrote:Why do you use it a dozen times per day if it's wrong so often? I use it a lot at home and love it. I wouldn't trust it at work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m honestly having a blast using it and I don’t understand why people aren’t figuring out what a great tool AI is if you don’t rely on it to hand you your work.
Here is what I use it for:
- coding to create automated spreadsheets and word templates- I already knew how to do some computer programming honestly but I was not going to make this effort w/o ChatGPT
- Converting data and moving it around, turning documents into tables that I can load into excel and turn into a mini database
- uploading and summarizing long documents like legislation or regulations- it’s accurate at this
- outlining out ideas, organizing my thoughts and pointing out things I missed
- planning out steps for long term projects
It’s a fantastic tool but you’ll notice I’m not asking it to do my job, just augment things I do.
It’s not accurate at the bolded. It only seems accurate to people who don’t have the experience and skill to catch the mistakes it makes. It looks very accurate, but is not actually accurate.
Well I've been a lawyer for a decade and it's serving my purposes just fine. It gives me a quick summary and saves me time from writing one myself. It's just picking up language patterns in a pre-existing document and it's good at it. It's also improved a lot in just the past few months. This isn't a static technology. I'm having a lot of fun experimenting, trying out different programs, seeing what they can do and how far they can go before they hit a wall.
At a decade out, you aren’t sophisticated enough to pick up the subtle but significant errors.
There is a reason Harvey is popular with junior associates but not with partners. And it isn’t the lack of sophistication of the partners. It’s the error rates.
Your unnecessarily insulting language suggests to me that you don’t really understand the potential of this technology and feel sort of threatened by it. I’ve used ChatGPT successfully to summarize long documents, develop talking points, timelines, code, etc. While it definitely occasionally spits out errors, that’s not a problem if you review the work. It’s worth the time saved.
Anyway, not my problem, if I find something that saves me hours a day I’m using it. Sorry you can’t pad your billing as much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m honestly having a blast using it and I don’t understand why people aren’t figuring out what a great tool AI is if you don’t rely on it to hand you your work.
Here is what I use it for:
- coding to create automated spreadsheets and word templates- I already knew how to do some computer programming honestly but I was not going to make this effort w/o ChatGPT
- Converting data and moving it around, turning documents into tables that I can load into excel and turn into a mini database
- uploading and summarizing long documents like legislation or regulations- it’s accurate at this
- outlining out ideas, organizing my thoughts and pointing out things I missed
- planning out steps for long term projects
It’s a fantastic tool but you’ll notice I’m not asking it to do my job, just augment things I do.
It’s not accurate at the bolded. It only seems accurate to people who don’t have the experience and skill to catch the mistakes it makes. It looks very accurate, but is not actually accurate.
Well I've been a lawyer for a decade and it's serving my purposes just fine. It gives me a quick summary and saves me time from writing one myself. It's just picking up language patterns in a pre-existing document and it's good at it. It's also improved a lot in just the past few months. This isn't a static technology. I'm having a lot of fun experimenting, trying out different programs, seeing what they can do and how far they can go before they hit a wall.
At a decade out, you aren’t sophisticated enough to pick up the subtle but significant errors.
There is a reason Harvey is popular with junior associates but not with partners. And it isn’t the lack of sophistication of the partners. It’s the error rates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m honestly having a blast using it and I don’t understand why people aren’t figuring out what a great tool AI is if you don’t rely on it to hand you your work.
Here is what I use it for:
- coding to create automated spreadsheets and word templates- I already knew how to do some computer programming honestly but I was not going to make this effort w/o ChatGPT
- Converting data and moving it around, turning documents into tables that I can load into excel and turn into a mini database
- uploading and summarizing long documents like legislation or regulations- it’s accurate at this
- outlining out ideas, organizing my thoughts and pointing out things I missed
- planning out steps for long term projects
It’s a fantastic tool but you’ll notice I’m not asking it to do my job, just augment things I do.
It’s not accurate at the bolded. It only seems accurate to people who don’t have the experience and skill to catch the mistakes it makes. It looks very accurate, but is not actually accurate.
Well I've been a lawyer for a decade and it's serving my purposes just fine. It gives me a quick summary and saves me time from writing one myself. It's just picking up language patterns in a pre-existing document and it's good at it. It's also improved a lot in just the past few months. This isn't a static technology. I'm having a lot of fun experimenting, trying out different programs, seeing what they can do and how far they can go before they hit a wall.
Anonymous wrote:I like it. I use it to edit documents for grammar. I'm also having it help me redecorate my living room and dining room.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m honestly having a blast using it and I don’t understand why people aren’t figuring out what a great tool AI is if you don’t rely on it to hand you your work.
Here is what I use it for:
- coding to create automated spreadsheets and word templates- I already knew how to do some computer programming honestly but I was not going to make this effort w/o ChatGPT
- Converting data and moving it around, turning documents into tables that I can load into excel and turn into a mini database
- uploading and summarizing long documents like legislation or regulations- it’s accurate at this
- outlining out ideas, organizing my thoughts and pointing out things I missed
- planning out steps for long term projects
It’s a fantastic tool but you’ll notice I’m not asking it to do my job, just augment things I do.
It’s not accurate at the bolded. It only seems accurate to people who don’t have the experience and skill to catch the mistakes it makes. It looks very accurate, but is not actually accurate.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not nearly as good as all the pro-AI bots want us to believe. These folks are just trying to force a market so they can make money.
Yes, it formats, it analyzes, etc. But you have to accept 60% error rates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to learn how to write prompts correctly. Seriously. Take a course in how to do it. You must also ask it to check it's work. Learn how to set the temps on hallucination. You have to put in some effort.
I literally work in the field and this is wrong.
Ok, expert. Correct me! What about the response is wrong?
Anonymous wrote:Try Gemini or grok. They are better and you can work with them to refine responses.