I've also been using AI extensively for the past year and a half. The first thing I noticed was AI's suck at applied math. I've been using it to assist in engineering research. My current opinion is that AI is like an assistant who is an idiot savant. It can do some things very well, but is completely useless for others. It often needs to be checked and guided, and it's not very good at qualitative assessments without very tight guidelines.
It sucks at graphics too. It can't even create them without misspellings. The outcomes are ridiculous and hilarious.
Mine can remember my dog's name but not that I told it 100+ times that I don't want the name of the application I'm developing to be named or described in my resume or cover letters or other documentation.
I have a friend who is setting up a website and using AI to generate some graphics. She is very frustrated at the multiple mispellings she often has to correct.
As someone posted earlier - GIGO! I attended a lecture at Harvey Mudd College, The Claremont Colleges, about 30 years ago. The professor was well spoken and very knowledgeable. The part I remember most is him saying - until we truly understand how the human brain really works, there will be no real AI. I still believe that.
I've also been using AI extensively for the past year and a half. The first thing I noticed was AI's suck at applied math. I've been using it to assist in engineering research. My current opinion is that AI is like an assistant who is an idiot savant. It can do some things very well, but is completely useless for others. It often needs to be checked and guided, and it's not very good at qualitative assessments without very tight guidelines.
It sucks at graphics too. It can't even create them without misspellings. The outcomes are ridiculous and hilarious.
Mine can remember my dog's name but not that I told it 100+ times that I don't want the name of the application I'm developing to be named or described in my resume or cover letters or other documentation.
All this suddenly becomes quite critical when those bogus graphics are in peer reviewed medical papers:
> https://bra.in/4pDwxr
Yikes!
I have a friend who is setting up a website and using AI to generate some graphics. She is very frustrated at the multiple mispellings she often has to correct.
As someone posted earlier - GIGO! I attended a lecture at Harvey Mudd College, The Claremont Colleges, about 30 years ago. The professor was well spoken and very knowledgeable. The part I remember most is him saying - until we truly understand how the human brain really works, there will be no real AI. I still believe that.