I’ve found that AI has done literally nothing to improve my life in any way and has really just caused endless frustrations. From the enshitification of journalism to ruining pretty much all tech support and customer service, what is the point of this shit?

I work on the Salesforce platform and now I have their dumbass account managers harassing my team to buy into their stupid AI customer service agents. Really, the only AI highlight that I have seen is the guy that made the tool to spam job applications to combat worthless AI job recruiters and HR tools.

  • yrmp@lemmy.world
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    18 minutes ago

    I use perplexity.ai more than google now. I still don’t love it and it’s more of a testament to how far google has fallen than the usefulness of AI, but I do find myself using it to get a start on basic searches. It is, dare I say, good at calorie counting and language learning things. Helps calculate calorie to gram ratios and the math is usually correct. It also helps me with German, since it’s good at finding patterns and how German people typically say what I am trying to say, instead of just running it through a translator which may or not have the correct context.

    I do miss the days where I could ask AI to talk like Obama while he’s taking a shit during an earthquake. ChatGPT would let you go off the rails when it first came out. That was a lot of fun and I laughed pretty hard at the stupid scenarios I could come up with. I’m probably the reason the guardrails got added.

    • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 minute ago

      It also helps me with German, since it’s good at finding patterns and how German people typically say

      Depending on your first language I can offer you my assistance as a native german :)
      If you want to, pm me or send a message

  • ContrarianTrail@lemm.ee
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    47 minutes ago

    That’s a bit loaded question. By AI I assume you’re refering to GenAI/LLMs rather than AI broadly.

    • I use it to correct my spelling on longer posts and I find that it improves the clarity and helps my point come across better.
    • I use Dall-E to create pictures I never could have before, because despite my interest in drawing, I just never bothered to learn it myself. GenAI enables me to skip the learning and go straight to creating.
    • I like that it can simulate famous people and allows me to ask ‘them’ questions that I never could in real life. For example, yesterday I spent a good while chatting with ‘Sam Harris’ about the morality of lying and the edge cases where it might be justified. I find discussions like this genuinely enjoyable and insightful.
    • I also like using the voice mode where I can just talk with it. As a non-native english speaker, I find it to be good practise to help me improve my spelling.
    • NoneOfUrBusiness@fedia.io
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      34 minutes ago

      As a non-native english speaker, I find it to be good practise to help me improve my spelling.

      To nitpick a bit, you’re probably thinking of pronunciation. Spelling is written, not spoken.

  • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    It tends to make Lemmy people mad for some reason, but I find GitHub copilot to be helpful.

  • PlzGivHugs@sh.itjust.works
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    2 hours ago

    If used in the specific niche use cases its trained for, as long as its used as a tool and not a final product. For example, using AI to generate background elements of a complete image. The AI elements aren’t the focus, and should be things that shouldn’t matter, but it might be better to use an AI element rather than doing a bare minimum element by hand. This might be something like a blurred out environment background behind a peice of hand drawn character art - otherwise it might just be a gradient or solid colour because it isn’t important, but having something low-quality is better than having effectively nothing.

    In a similar case, for multidisciplinary projects where the artists can’t realistically work proficiently in every field required, AI assets may be good enough to meet the minimum requirements to at least complete the project. For example, I do a lot of game modding - I’m proficient with programming, game/level design, and 3D modeling, but not good enough to make dozens of textures and sounds that are up to snuff. I might be able to dedicate time to make a couple of most key resources myself or hire someone, but seeing as this is a non-commercial, non-monitized project I can’t buy resources regularly. AI can be a good enough solution to get the project out the door.

    In the same way, LLM tools can be good if used as a way to “extend” existing works. Its a generally bad idea to rely entirely on them, but if you use it to polish a sentence you wrote, come up with phrasing ideas, or write your long if-chain for you, then it’s a way of improving or speeding up your work.

    Basically, AI tools as they are, should be seen as another tool by those in or adjacent to the related profession - another tool in the toolbox rather than a way to replace the human.

  • Sentient Loom@sh.itjust.works
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    4 hours ago

    I got high and put in prompts to see what insane videos it would make. That was fun. I even made some YouTube videos from it. I also saw some cool & spooky short videos that are basically “liminal” since it’s such an inhuman construction.

    But generally, no. It’s making the internet worse. And as a customer I definitely never want to deal with an AI instead of a human.

      • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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        35 minutes ago

        I mean, yeah, but that difference is quite crucial.

        People have always wanted to be the top search result without putting effort in, because that brings in ad money.
        But without putting effort in, their articles were generally short, had typoes, and there were relatively few such articles.

        Now, LLMs allow these same people to pump out hundredfold as much gargage, consisting of lengthy articles in many languages. And because LLMs are specifically trained to produce texts that are human-like, it’s difficult for search engines to filter out these bad quality results.

    • CookieMonsterDebate@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      100%. I don’t need help finding what’s on your website. I can find that myself. If I’m contacting customer support it’s because my problem needs another brain on it, from the inside. Someone who can think and take action to help me. Might require creativity or flexibility. AI has never helped me solve anything.

  • proti@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    The only things I use and I know they have AI are Spotify recommendations, live captions on videos and DLSS. I don’t find generative AI to be interesting, but there’s nothing wrong with machine learning itself imo if it’s used for things that have purpose.

  • fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    5 hours ago

    ChatGPT is incredibly good at helping you with random programming questions, or just dumping a full ass error text and it telling you exactly what’s wrong.

    This afternoon I used ChatGPT to figure out what the error preventing me from updating my ESXi server. I just copy pasted the entire error text which was one entire terminal windows worth of shit, and it knew that there was an issue accessing the zip. It wasn’t smart enough to figure out “hey dumbass give it a full file path not relative” but eventually I got there. Earlier this morning I used it to write a cross apply instead of using multiple sub select statements. It forgot to update the order by, but that was a simple fix. I use it for all sorts of other things we do at work too. ChatGPT won’t replace any programmers, but it will help them be more productive.

  • Dagamant@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    I think it’s a fun toy that is being misused and forced into a lot of things it isn’t ready for.

    I’m doing a lot with AI but it’s pretty much slop. I use self hosted stable diffusion, Ollama, and whisper for a discord bot, code help, writing assistance, and I pay elevenlabs for TTS so I can talk to it. It’s been pretty useful. It’s all running on an old computer with a 3060. Voice chat is a little slow and has its own problems but it’s all been fun to learn.

  • taiyang@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    When it just came out I had AI write fanfiction that no sane person would write, and other silly things. I liked that. That and trail cam photos of the Duolingo mascot.

    I think my complaints are more with how capitalism treats new technology, though-- and not just lost jobs and the tool on the climate. Greed and competition is making it worse and worse as a technology that AI itself, within a years span, has been enshittified. There are use cases that it can do a world of good, though, just like everything else bad people ruin.