I’m talking about for anything.

I ask because, although I am wary about the effects of AI and things made with it, I can’t help but notice it’s becoming a bigger part of my every day life.

It’s just so convenient to use it as an assistant where I can get answers to difficult or obscure questions on the fly.

I’m imaging this might be part of the ploy by AI companies. Once AI is so integrated in our lives, we won’t want to do without it. It’d be like taking away electricity.

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    Why do so many brand new accounts make posts here trying to get people to talk about AI?

    Everyday there’s multiple, and almost every account ends up getting deleted.

    It’s just weird

  • kescusay@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    I’m required to use it a little bit for my job. (I’m a software developer). I do the absolute minimum I can with it, then don’t touch it the rest of the day.

    Reasons:

    • It’s an ongoing environmental disaster.
    • It’s a giant plagiarism machine.
    • If you’re trusting its output, you’re being foolish.
    • The business model for them being profitable doesn’t exist. I don’t want to depend on a technology I consider a dead end.
    • They make you stupid. If you get hooked on using them, then when the bubble finally pops and most of these bullshit purveyors fold, you’ll have already forgotten how to think and research for yourself. The imaginary “convenience” of being confidently and convincingly lied to by a large language model isn’t worth it.

    Ask one how to cook a turkey, it will give you convincing and unsafe instructions. Ask it if any mammals fly airplanes, it will gaslight you into thinking none do (humans are mammals). Ask it to do any task involving parsing the letters in words, and instead of honestly telling you it can’t, it will give you utterly incorrect responses.

    These tools aren’t fit for purpose. They’re shiny and fast and wrong in both obvious and subtle ways.

  • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@slrpnk.net
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    14 days ago

    I use voice-to-text several times a week.

    I play videogames that feature mobs with complex behaviors.

    I use route-planning software a couple times a week.

    I use the google call-screening service daily.

    Only the last is an LLM, but they’re all AI.

  • ace_garp@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    Using local FOSS AI tools, 1-2 times a month.

    Whisper+ - Voice recognition (essentially flawless)

    SherpaTTS - Text to Speech engine (quite good, some pronunciation mishits)

    The online AI stuff may be brainrot, so will take it slower on that front.

  • Passerby6497@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    I use it more than I would like for technical troubleshooting and research because holy fuck are search engines trash these days. I try to search ddg/bing/Google first, but goddamn if the fucking search engines don’t decide to go drinking and show me so much shit that’s only tangentially related (and the fucking search operators don’t work reliably for me - the number of times I quote something or add restrictions to the search and it’s just completely ignored) that I spend less time fact checking the AI than I do digging through pages of garbage.

    I fucking hate the modern Internet

  • cally [he/they]@pawb.social
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    14 days ago

    Very rarely on purpose. Last time I willingly used a chatbot for something was like ~7 months ago IIRC. Sometimes I am searching random things up in incognito (so it doesn’t pollute my browsing history) and DuckDuckGo shows the stupid AI overview because of course, in incognito it’s not gonna know that I specifically disabled their “AI” features. It should be opt-in!!!

    Yes, they’re kinda useful by themselves, but in a search engine? Sure, it can filter results or whatever, but it’s just easier for me to go to a website I know and look for the info there.

    Also, I don’t like chatbots because usually I just want to search one thing and leave - and to me, it doesn’t feel like that’s what they were designed for. They’re meant for “conversation” but I don’t want to talk to a bot. There are, of course, a plethora of other reasons why I don’t like LLMs, which I won’t be getting into in this reply.

  • FreshParsnip@lemmy.ca
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    14 days ago

    I went through a period where I chatted with ChatGPT a lot but then I got freaked out by the idea that someone could read the conversations and I deleted most of it. I still ask ChatGPT questions occasionally if it is a complex question that is easier to ChatGPT than Google but I know that ChatGPT is plain incorrect sometimes so take any info it gives you with a grain of salt. Also, be cautious not to start thinking of chatbots as real people, try not to develop an emotional attachment

  • Dew@feddit.nl
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    14 days ago

    I still look up software issues I have with my PC in a search engine, but when I cannot find something I do quick search prompt on ChatGPT but the chat limit is often hit on my end… It’s not great, but it helps with certain niche issues me I and I alone experience…

  • zxqwas@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    I used it to look up data on wikipedia articles and plug said data into a fairly simple formula and do the maths for me.

    Like three times ever.

  • Fit_Series_573@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    I only use it within Kagi and only have pretty much used their Kiki K2 model which I believe is locally on their servers. At most I’d say twice a week to help sift through some information faster but have no intention for outside of that. Such a waste of resources and compute power for most tasks imo, the internet needs better indexing to find information more efficiently.

  • oyfrog@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    I’ve got the ai search bullshit turned off for my Google searches.

    I occasionally use chatgpt to write awk scripts for me for work because I find awk difficult. The one liners it spits out are wrong 7/10 times, but it puts me in the right direction, so it’s not completely useless. Now that I type this out, I wonder if it’s hindering my awk-learning…

    It is pretty good at annotating code that already works, which is pretty convenient.