For sure there are use-cases where AI tools are excellent.I was busy working on making a spreadsheet comparing Electric Vehicles. I had been working on it for about 20 minutes when my sister came by, opened an app and asked it to make the spreadsheet. two minutes later it was done but for some tweaking.
I have already thought of some more spreadsheets to make. maybe one comparing the cost and potency of Vegan Omegas.
BTW the app's name is Perplexity.
"Create a spreadsheet that compares electric vehicles on range, cost, charging time and battery capacity"
Love your compassion, PTree5.The ChatGBT scares me. It just takes the human factor out of writing, and I fear an even greater erosion of creativity overall, not to mention taking people’s jobs away. Will this replace grant writers, fiction writers, PR people? How then do those people earn a living? We may need some type of universal basic income to help people squeezed out of jobs because of AI, especially older workers who may not be able to learn new jobs or because companies don’t want to pay older workers.
You said it. People use AI.The fact, for example, that people can use AI to create.....
"Guns don't kill people. People kill people."You said it. People use AI.
It's a tool. it can be used for bad Or good.
We don''t stop making cars because somebody uses them in a bank robbery.
people may use AI to do bad things.but people are also using AI for good things.
if you google what are some good uses of AI an AI will give you plenty of examples.![]()
"Guns don't kill people. People kill people."
I think AI, like guns, needs regulation.
But I think it helps to differentiate between different kinds of AI. Some are less problematic. For example, machine learning on very particular user cases, such as within research and medicine.