I am predisposed to canker sores and if I use a toothpaste with SLS in it I'll get them. But a lot of the SLS free toothpastes are new age hippy stuff and is also fluoride free.
I went to chatgpt and asked it to suggest a toothpaste that was both SLS free and had fluoride. Pretty simple ask right?
It came back with two suggestions. It's top suggestion had SLS, it's backup suggestion lacked fluoride.
Yes, it is mind blowing the world we live in. Executives want to turn our code bases over to these tools
0 - https://chatgpt.com/share/683e3807-0bf8-800a-8bab-5089e4af51...
1 - https://chatgpt.com/share/683e3558-6738-800a-a8fb-3adc20b69d...
Meanwhile the rest of the world learned how to use it.
We have a choice. Ignore the tool or learn to use it.
(There was lots of dumb hype then, too; the sort of hype that skeptics latched on to to carry the burden of their argument that the whole thing was a fad.)
Very few people "learned how to use" Google, and in fact - many still use it rather ineffectively. This is not the same paradigm shift.
"Learning" ChatGPT is not a technology most will learn how to use effectively. Just like Google they will ask it to find them an answer. But the world of LLMs is far broader with more implications. I don't find the comparison of search and LLM at an equal weight in terms of consequences.
The TL;DR of this is ultimately: understanding how to use an LLM, at it's most basic level, will not put you in the drivers seat in exactly the same way that knowing about Google also didn't really change anything for anyone (unless you were an ad executive years later). And in a world of Google or no-Google, hindsight would leave me asking for a no-Google world. What will we say about LLMs?