|
|
|
|
|
by xpe
1032 days ago
|
|
> So despite its flaws and mistakes, I still find it to be a tremendously useful tool, even if only to point me in the right direction. Much of this resonates. That said, I get tremendous value simply by writing things down (or dictating them) and replying to my own question. I would expect that a sizable fraction of people have forgotten about these strategies and/or don't use them when they are most useful. For many, there is tremendous muscle memory to run a Hooli search almost on mental autopilot. Who has time to slow down and write a well-conceived question? Or perhaps we should turn it around ... On a longer time horizon, who would want to waste time with poorly-conceived questions? It is the question that starts the process. So we should ask good questions. Do we? I'd be curious about the usage data OpenAI collects. I do my best to lower expectations about people in general, but I'm confident I'd still be unprepared for the level of thought put into questions. > But what's most amazing to me is how ChatGPT is absolutely brilliant at some things, and not just technical or even obscure topics. I'm not amazed in the way you are. I expect a variation in quality across topics and domains and question styles. |
|
Yes, I can see that. But over time, you also learn and adapt the prompts to ChatGPT's peculiarities so that it provides more useful output.
Still, I'm sure there are many topics/domains for which it's not useful.
As another anecdote, I'm not a mathematician but at one point I was playing around with proving theorems on a theorem prover.
What I found is that ChatGPT is this paradoxical entity which makes the most elementary math errors all the time (I'm talking third-grade level math mistakes), and yet, it was by far the most useful tool ever in coming up with lots of useful PhD-level ideas and math theorems that would allow me to complete proofs when I was completely stuck (and not just for proofs which it had seen before).
It came up all the time with brilliant ideas and theorems which simultaneously I didn't even know existed, were not part of any theorem database of any theorem prover I had seen before (and I've seen the vast majority of them), and there was no way I was going to find them by searching on the web or writing things down on a notepad (I know this because I had tried, for days at a time, along with other ideas such as visualizations and simulations).
That's not to say a mathematician wouldn't be aware of them, but I don't have easy access to one, and I was surely not going to pay one given that I was just exploring, mostly for curiosity.
This seems like a paid ad, but I promise you, I have no affiliation whatsoever...