What are some other communities that are less used now? WritingPrompts and PhotoshopBattles come to mind for me
Interestingly, as ChatGPT might be trained on these ELI5 questions and as a result they are asked more infrequently, it might get worse over time or out of date on these types of questions by its own doing. I especially wonder how bad this influence will get on subjects that you’d normally search stackoverflow for.
ELI5 how to use ChatGPT and Bard
I don’t get why people trust their answers so much. They lie. Confidently. Constantly.
I usually ask the GPT, then look up the topic myself based on terms and keywords that were mentioned
I use ChatGPT just for programming and it gives wrong answers half of the time.
i’m studying mechanical engineering and there’s a guy in our class who’s obsessed with chatgpt. he’s always trying to solve all of the tasks using chatgpt and he’s always the first to share the solution in zoom. so far it’s never been correct but he just sticks with it…
I am a mechanical engineer. I was able to get special permission from my IT department to use LLMs as part of my workflow as a genie pig for the department. It is completely useless.
One the most valuable skill an engineer can have is being able to communicate technical information effectively to different audiences. GPT is on overly polite meat grinder, spitting out half chewed technical slop.
I use chatGPT for any topic I’m curious about, and like half the time when i double check the answers it turns out they’re wrong.
For example i asked for a list of phones with screens that don’t use PWM, and when i looked up the specs of the phones it recommended it turned out they all had PWM, even though in the chatGPT answer it explicitly stated that each of these phones don’t use PWM. Why does it straight up lie?!
Not picking fights. Just curious.
Is this an improvement or a decline in your overall code programming success?
I am a hobbyist (and not very good) programmer, and while ChatGPT (free version) often gives me wrong answers, it still gives me some insight on how some stuff could be done (intentionally or not) or how something works and is actually somewhat helpful in learning stuff, but I guess this could be double-edged sword even in that regard.
It is also pretty good at detecting simple code errors, from what I have seen.
Overall more positive than negative, but I wouldn’t recommend to use it blindly.