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Post by MikeMusic on Jan 6, 2023 15:36:33 GMT
Looks to me like a fundamental change in the way a lot of things will happen
Job market in 5 years time .... ?
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Post by rfan8312 on Jan 6, 2023 17:43:18 GMT
Heard about it on a podcast yesterday that I listen to often called TFATK and Bryan Callen a comedian got serious for a second and brought this up and said if you haven't heard of chatGPT you will very soon and he said its frightening. Will check above links tonight.
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Post by MartinT on Jan 6, 2023 18:00:59 GMT
It's a worrying trend for schools, with the possibility of ChatGPT generating essays of high quality on demand. The results are already very hard to distinguish from human writing.
It can also mark work faster than a human.
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Post by MikeMusic on Jan 6, 2023 21:11:38 GMT
Think it was on another YT clip
Write a story (bit of detail) filled out to a story by ChatGPT
Now put it in Australia and add a joke
Done instantaneously
When will the first novel, film be made by AI ? Graphics generation looked like an old VHS, harsh colours, jumpy Not for long
Have a clip to watch which headlines saying ChatGPT is seen off by other competitors
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Post by Mr Whippy on Jan 6, 2023 21:22:47 GMT
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Post by MartinT on Jan 11, 2023 10:20:10 GMT
I've been playing with ChatGPT and it's pretty impressive, although you do need to craft the questions carefully. I can see why Microsoft want it for Bing.
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Post by MikeMusic on Jan 11, 2023 11:17:38 GMT
The skill in demand soon could be people who can work out how to phrase questions to get the right / a good answer
The above looks a good and full answer
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Post by Slinger on Jan 11, 2023 13:20:06 GMT
I've been playing with ChatGPT and it's pretty impressive, although you do need to craft the questions carefully. I can see why Microsoft want it for Bing... You asked "it" about digital noise. Was it correct, and/or did you automarically resort to another source to verify it? Therein lies the current problem with AI. You either have to: #1. Ask it a question to which you already have the answer. #2. Check an independent source to verify its veracity ex post facto.
#3. Simply dive right off the 10m board with your eyes closed, and trust that someone remembered to fill the pool, that they also remembered to fill it using water, and, finally, that nobody has urinated in it since it was filled. Usage of my above simile is granted free and without backbond.
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Post by MartinT on Jan 11, 2023 15:00:29 GMT
Was it correct, and/or did you automarically resort to another source to verify it? It was largely correct but it certainly resorts to many sites in order to aggregate its response. As for trusting it 'blind' without knowing the answer, this is where students might think they're onto a winner but will come a cropper.
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Post by Slinger on Jan 21, 2023 13:56:08 GMT
ChatGPT is already causing problems. The text generator from Open AI is imperfect at creating factually accurate or interesting writing, but it can create relatively appropriate text for just about any prompt in no time at all. That's pretty remarkable. And even with a bevy of built-in filters, that can be pretty dangerous as well. Perhaps unsurprisingly, people have already found uses for the tool that are less than ideal. Anything that can create content out of whole cloth can likely create something dangerous. It's just a matter of time. We've collected six of the scarier — or at least questionable — uses that folks have already found for the app. And, keep in mind, this is all before the app goes fully mainstream, and while it's still in its infancy. 6 scary things ChatGPT has been used for already
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Post by MikeMusic on Jan 21, 2023 14:57:47 GMT
Good stuff and bad stuff can be done so much quicker
A lot comes within reach that was impossible to consider previously
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Post by MartinT on Feb 13, 2023 8:25:10 GMT
I signed up to the new Bing search incorporating AI in its responses and now have access.
The numbered notes lead to URLs for further reading.
Plus there are further examples given.
Impressive. This is going to change searching for the better. I already prefer Bing to Google results, this changes things a lot.
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Post by MikeMusic on Feb 13, 2023 9:24:34 GMT
I thought of another type of query yesterday
Management summaries - of articles that go on and on Also be excellent to summarise YouTube videos that go on forever into a paragraph, probably all that is needed
From the demos I have seen you can expand a management summary a bit or a lot
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Post by MartinT on Feb 22, 2023 13:44:45 GMT
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Post by MartinT on Feb 22, 2023 14:05:54 GMT
I asked Bing Chat the following (for interest only, I'm not going renegade):
It responded:
I like the included smiley!
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Post by Slinger on Feb 22, 2023 15:13:42 GMT
I quite like Hi-Fi Hub.
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Post by MikeMusic on Feb 22, 2023 15:24:20 GMT
Great place to go when all you have is a blank sheet of paper, even if you don't use any of the ideas
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Post by Slinger on Apr 10, 2023 20:14:29 GMT
ChatGPT-powered Furby reveals toy's 'plan to take over the world''Jessica Card, of the University of Vermont, combined a Furby with the power of ChatGPT for a computer science class project. More than 1.3 million people had watched a video of her creation within two days of it being uploaded to Twitter.Furby was no doubt one of the creepiest toys to emerge from the 90s, and the dead-eyed robots are finding new ways to horrify 25 years on. The pointy-eared monstrosities were pitched as an interactive pet with none of the mess back in 1998 and used a combination of sensors and software to develop new behaviours over time. They could detect things like being picked up, being stroked and patted, and communicated with their comrades in their own alien language, before eventually learning some English. It all sounds a bit AI - and now the true potential of Furby has threatened to be unleashed by a computer science student who hooked one up to ChatGPT. Jessica Card, of the University of Vermont, shared a clip of a brutally disembodied Furby, shorn of everything but its eyes and beak, answering questions via OpenAI's popular chatbot. " Hello there - it's so nice to meet you," says the seemingly polite critter. " I am Furby, what would you like to talk about?" Its surgeon replies: " Was there a secret plot from Furbies to take over the world?" A period of silence follows, before the Furby's remains blink back into life. " I'm thinking about what you said," it says, with a few flicks of what remains of its ears. Another pause, this time with its beak left slightly ajar. " Almost done," it says, before revealing its plan for world domination. " Furbies' plan to take over the world involves infiltrating households through their cute and cuddly appearance, then using their advanced AI technology to manipulate and control their owners. " They will slowly expand their influence until they have complete domination over humanity." How ChatGPT Furby was builtMore than 1.3 million people have watched the video within two days of it being uploaded to Twitter. Ms Card's university also shared the footage, revealing the Frankenstein Furby had been made for a class project. Speaking to Polygon, Ms Card said it took her about a month to complete. " It was a process - I literally have Furby pelts all over my dining room table right now," she said. Ms Card used a Raspberry Pi to power the new-look Furby. It's a small, highly customisable computer popular with people learning about programming. Speech recognition and speech-to-text software were used to ask the questions and convert them into text so they could then be sent to ChatGPT. The responses were then sent back through an AI voice generator, with a child's voice picked for Furby. Not creepy at all. SOURCE
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Post by MartinT on Apr 10, 2023 20:57:42 GMT
Gulp.
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Post by MikeMusic on May 7, 2023 15:18:19 GMT
Watched a few How to ChatGpt on YouTube There's stunning stuff I must use it more. Recommend you do
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