Just fantastic technology all around. Absolutely no worry where this is all going to go.

Is it just me? Am I using this wrong or am I asking questions that are too hard?

Here’s an example of a hallucination that happened while explaining away another hallucination I called it out on. I rarely have experiences other than these.

@mwichary It’s not just you.

@beep @mwichary DEFINITELY not just you.

The problem is that it's amazing 20% of the time, which is all people can talk about. It gives the veneer of a revolution. But it's just OK about 60% of the time, and batshit crazy the remaining 20%. Those aren't good odds.

@scottjenson @beep Yeah, I was just thinking about that!!! You don’t expect Sturgeon’s Law to invade software like this, though. Google felt immune to it.

@scottjenson @beep I am getting a sense that it’s okay to ask for mainstream/obvious things. Anything that’s a bit more obscure almost never gets me anywhere useful.

I am sometimes finding it a good alt to Google for locating specific pages I know exist! (Which ironically is “you had one job” of Google.)

@mwichary @scottjenson @beep “Jeanine Raskin (or ‘Jeanine Raskin’)”

What?

@ramsey @mwichary @scottjenson @beep

The other one is probably in some other script such as Arabic or Cyrillic or Greek or Devanagari script, and transliterated to Latin script here.

The neural network doesn't handle words at all, only nodes. And the program has (correctly) connected the two nodes as one real-life entity. Джанинє Рашкін and Janine Rashkin are two different text strings, and therefore not the same concept unless linked as the same.

Funny all the same :)

@mwichary @scottjenson @beep the main thing I use it for is "what's the word for..." when I can describe the thing precisely. sort of a reverse wikipedia. (most recently: "that style of poetry which is similar to a villanelle but repeats entire lines rather than just the rhyming words.") works because I recognize the answer when I see it. I've also probably put too much time into prompt customization to get it to speak plainly and quit simpering.
@relsqui @mwichary @scottjenson @beep So like a reverse dictionary, like this: https://reversedictionary.org/
Reverse Dictionary

@WhiteCatTamer @mwichary @scottjenson @beep in concept, yes! a dictionary definition string search doesn't work as well for my given example though