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I dunno AI still seems incapable of doing very basic things I ask it to. We don’t even have self driving cars yet! This seems like something that’s always “just a few years away” as a trick to get investors excited
Surveys of actual companies show that basically no one is using AI at companies at all. Users here like to argue this point but many of you are programmers - the exact demographic to be able to use and exploit these LLMs.
Uh, what do you mean we don't have self-driving cars? I took two driverless Waymo rides last week, navigating the nasty, twisting streets of SF. It drove just fine. Maybe you could argue it's not cost-effective yet, or that there are still regulatory hurdles, but I think what you meant is that the tech doesn't work. And that's clearly false.
Also, I'm a programmer and productively using ChatGPT at work, so I'd say the score so far is Magusoflight 0, my lying eyes 2.
you totally misunderstood my comment.
If you intended sarcasm, then this is an excellent example of Poe's law. There are people here who would unironically say the same thing, and have.
I wasn’t being sarcastic. It’s strange, I guess this part was confusing to you?
The implication I’ll unpack for you - if you’re a programmer you live a bubble. Coding seems extremely important and useful - and since one of the few things LLM can do well is coding, this makes it seem very productive and useful! Hence programmers are very biased on this topic. You don’t really see how unpragmatic LLMs are for any other occupation
I'm a doctor. I think LLMs are very "pragmatic" or at least immensely useful for my profession. They could do much more if regulatory systems allowed them to.
I work in the health system and we STILL rely on a paper healthcare chart.
In 2025
Holy shit. In the U.S? I know of a few but very very few at this point.
Even the VA figured this shit out.
Nah I live in the cold land of “free” healthcare
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