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  • #16
    The day it started; I got the information from a friend and since then I "play" with it occasionally.
    Of course; the first thing that came to my mind was writing code for Arduino and other dev boards.
    I was shocked with the amount of senseless mistakes it was making.
    For example, for PWM often knows to engage a non-pwm pin, although I strictly always write that it is an Atmega328p or an Arduino UNO.
    However... as time goes on; it seems to be progressing and learning.
    I always delete all history and previous chats on purpose.
    Just so I can check if it generates answers based on experience from previous chats or not.
    Although it is not a safe method, because I am logged in, maybe the server still contains all my chats but I only delete them from my side.
    As time goes on; I am more and more convinced of it.
    Today after several months; it's still not a fully usable tool for writing any serious code.
    But it serves me as an excellent tool for shortening the work of writing code.
    I would call it "an outstanding and intuitive template maker".
    Ever since the days of Cobol, I've hated "conventions" and structures, headers, etc.
    And I have always had various templates in reserve on disk that I would change a little if necessary.
    Now with the help of ChatGPT AI, that job is also faster and easier.
    But it is good only with shorter functions, with longer code it generates errors by geometric progression.
    I always have to "walk" through the entire code and manually correct errors.
    However, I cannot say that it is not a certain progress and a great aid in the work.
    Just the other day I also tried Bing. Wow! What a conservative moron!
    Compared to ChatGPT Ai; Bing is still in early development.
    But Carl is right, ChatGPT AI just doesn't know how to say "I don't know".
    One day I was in too malicious a mood and repeated demands to it until it "passed out".
    It stopped generating the response but didn't say "I don't know" until the end...

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    • #17
      "The Metal Detecting Bible: Helpful Tips, Expert Tricks, and Insider Secrets for Finding Hidden Treasures" is written by Brandon Neice
      and "Metal Detecting: A Beginner's Guide: to Mastering the Greatest Hobby In the World." is by Mark Smith.

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      • #18
        Carl, not only have you died, but now it appears that your very existence has been erased from public record.

        Who is carl Moreland

        I'm sorry, but I couldn't find any notable person named "Carl Moreland" through my search. Can you please provide more context or information about who Carl Moreland is or what he is known for?



        I think chat is monitoring this thread and don't like the criticism. So chat say goodbye to carl by disappearing him.

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        • #19
          How about that!??

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          • #20
            I had to ask "it" several times to see what is the catch...
            First I was unknow private figure.
            Then I was Nikola Tesla's nephew!??
            Then I was world wide famous criminal!??
            And last (but not least) now I am mathematician and computer scientist!???
            I can live with "computer"... but "mathematician" !???


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            • #21
              The book exists in the database "somewhere out there", and the names are associated with the book.
              If we search by name; the result is nothing or false. If we search through the book; the result is correct.



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              • #22
                "It" can chat on Serbian too, with no language mistakes at all.
                So I switched to Serbian, for the first time so far, asking it about Geotech forum, it gave me all but nothing about this forum:


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                • #23
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                  • #24
                    "...In ancient Egypt, servants were smeared with honey in order to attract flies away from the pharaoh..."

                    This is HILARIOUS !!!


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                    • #25
                      It "doesn't know" anything... until you give it some accurate data, and then "it" starts a whole diarrhea of ​​data and then "it" knows more then enough!

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                      • #26
                        Fun never ends with this AI yoyo!
                        Farewell common sense!



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                        • #27
                          "I've already told you more than I know."

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                          • #28
                            Originally posted by ivconic View Post
                            It "doesn't know" anything... until you give it some accurate data, and then "it" starts a whole diarrhea of ​​data and then "it" knows more then enough!
                            Yes, some constraints need to be defined, some parameters and facts to provide context, then off it goes.

                            Yet it affirmed the death of an individual who is alive, and composed a very glowing tribute, containing several fictions.I might have been convinced, had I not known otherwise.
                            Even if one were to provide some initial data to point chat in the right direction, the response it gives will contain fiction. And that is where chat can be dangerous, 'cause fiction is akin to disinformation, which is the next door neighbor of propaganda.

                            This tool is fantastic for certain tasks, a dream for engineers and experimentalists, physicists and mathematicians, computer scientists etc.,etc.
                            However, there is a downside, a real and present danger.

                            Long term, because hardcopies will become a thing of the past, it will become exceedingly difficult to distinguish reality from fiction since all information will be digitized and could very well be beyond challenge.
                            This is where fiction can become fact in a sort of recurring loop, reinforcing itself as time goes by. For example,if I were to have cut and paste chat's response to my question "who is Carl Moreland", and including it in a document entitled "the giants in the field of modern metal detecting theory and design", then uploaded this document, it would become part of this so called "recurring loop". This would form part of the data for any future responses by chat, perpetuating its own fiction.
                            If you scale this up, millions of documents written by authors using AI as a tool to assist them, then it is easy to see just how dangerous this can become.



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                            • #29
                              Interestingly, Elon Musk gave an interview in which he suggested a hard switch to pull the plug, cut the power, if AI goes off the rails.

                              At the rocket launch, t minus 40 seconds, there was a pause, some kinda software glich?, the countdown resumed. Blastoff!

                              Rocket explodes, mission failed? No, not all all, they said. True.

                              You're not gonna pull the plug on me, oh no, no, I'll pull the plug on you!

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                              • #30
                                A gun doesn't kill; but the one who holds it in his hand.

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