ChatGPT has helped me when I'm brainlocked, and improved my posts by tightening up my writing. I don't want to get carried away, though. I used to be able to remember over 50 phone numbers. Now I only remember two, mine and my husband's. As the old saying goes, if you don't use it, you'll lose it. 🤗
"We are reading different reports. Be careful about the sources." - Likewise.
"And you can do less of something but more of something else." - Right...like do less of the thinking and writing, get worse at it...and get better at asking a machine to do things for you? I don't know man. I think you see the downside in your article, you just aren't willing to let go of the convenience.
ChatGPT has helped me when I'm brainlocked, and improved my posts by tightening up my writing. I don't want to get carried away, though. I used to be able to remember over 50 phone numbers. Now I only remember two, mine and my husband's. As the old saying goes, if you don't use it, you'll lose it. 🤗
This brings me to another question: what should we keep and what should we lose?
Some skills, like problem solving, are vital. Others were made helpful, or mandatory, by the way the world was. But it's changing.
First) Most reports I am reading are saying the AI hallucinations are getting worse.
Second) The less you do, the less you can do.
We are reading different reports. Be careful about the sources.
And you can do less of something but more of something else.
"We are reading different reports. Be careful about the sources." - Likewise.
"And you can do less of something but more of something else." - Right...like do less of the thinking and writing, get worse at it...and get better at asking a machine to do things for you? I don't know man. I think you see the downside in your article, you just aren't willing to let go of the convenience.