• danielbln
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    91 year ago

    My mom never used VR, but she happily talks to GPT4. From that perspective I think mindshare in the broader population will be significantly higher than VR (even if it doesn’t live up to the hype VC/Wallstreet machine).

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          I’m just saying the accessibility of AI doesn’t necessarily mean it has more utility. Just that it’s more accessible.

      • danielbln
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        11 year ago

        Even if I would gift one to her she wouldn’t use it. VR headset is peak nerd shit, as much as I love it. Having a dialog with an AI is much more approachable to the layman.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          That’s fair I guess. I don’t have a VR headset or talk to AI so imo they’re both pretty nerdy. I only talk to chatGPT every now and then to see if it can help me with code problems, and it almost always fails spectacularly unless I’m doing something really basic.

          • danielbln
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            11 year ago

            I work as a systems engineer and use it daily. I feel there is a particular way of using it where it really shines. Priming it with “you are an experienced senior python/rust/etc. developer who writes robust, idiomatic and maintainable code”. Using GPT-4 (not 3.5) is paramount, and the Data Analysis mode on ChatGPT is also really useful, because GPT can actually run code to validate things.

            Noone should force it of course, but I feel once you get intuition about what and how it does things well (and when it falls on its face) then it really flies.