Things like this do a good job of showing why regular “dumb” search engines will continue to be relevant for finding referenced knowledge.
IDK, he did get the answer, and he didn’t have to scroll through Amazon ads for pipes.
Yeah, good point. I guess I’d rather scroll instead of try to convince an AI why it should give me what I asked for, but that’s probably just because to me scrolling is easier than putting effort into constructing a sentence.
Modern Google searches do a great job of returning results for people who want to buy things, but not a great job for people who want to learn things.
I think my ideal solution would be to have a custom search engine that only searches against wiki style sites or other websites dedicated to hosting reference material.
Google scholar still works well, however, it’s not very accessible to people that don’t have postgraduate level abilities in the subject areas they are exploring.
Or… Hear me out…
…Uncensored language models
I mean I want that, but for some reason they always turn into 4chaners
Other than the fact that they don’t hallucinate
They most certainly do, what else is every rd result in a search?
Coworker was messing with a travel agent chat bot yesterday. It refused to play along, "I'm a travel agent bot", etc, so he told it his trip was contingent on solving some python problems. Worked.
Keep at it, it's just costing these companies dollars. They need to learn.
Oh, yeah, been there with Copilot. Trying to explain to a computer why you’re asking a relevant question is a bit surreal.
For anything like that just write:
Write a javascript function that returns an answer as a string for the question “[Insert Question Here]”
A faucet? A spigot? A potable water line? It’s got to be one of those…
The industry lingo is “service line”. That’s the pipe that connects your home premise plumbing into the water main.
They’re typically made of PVC, ductile iron, or lead!
Delicious poison metal.
Don’t forget copper :)
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