• Rooskie91@discuss.online
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    1 day ago

    “You study diligently, while I cheat and learn nothing” You’re goddamned right we’re not the same, and I hope I never slip to the level of quality this guy does. Chuds believing what this guy believes is job security for me.

    • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I was jealous they read it in 2 hours. I’d spend 2 hours a night for a week to finish most books I enjoy reading.

      Number of times I re-read the same paragraph because I got distracted worrying about bills - 7. That’s usually when I have to give up reading for the night when I finish that chapter.

  • Lovable Sidekick@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Perfectly good approach if you know the subject well enough to know that the information you think you need is really what you need.

    But if you were using a book in that scenario you wouldn’t open it to page 1 and spend 2 hours reading it. You would glance through the index or TOC to find the relevant section (or flip right to it because you’re familiar with the book), then skim to what you need and read just that. You could also do this with an entirely unfamiliar book if you know the subject matter. I used to write my papers like that all the time. Either way, this approach could easily take less time than crafting a good prompt and tweaking it for a second or third run to make it work.

    Since the AI search is being compared with reading an entire book, it seems reasonable to assume OP is talking about a different scenario where they don’t know the subject well enough to use a simple search engine to simply look up a piece of information. They want to avoid learning the subject by having the AI teach them only the part they’re guessing is relevant. This scenario is asking for AI hallucinations, omission of subtle but important details through oversummarizing, and general inaccuracy that OP will be oblivious to since they don’t know the subject. OP might as well suggest browsing through memes.

  • andybytes@programming.dev
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    16 hours ago

    The leader is a follower and the follower is a leader that is dead if there is a hell it is inside your head. We are approaching the self fuffiling prophecy. The singularity of “hey mom look no hands.” A broken wing, a bird that is a rock and a world of just thots.

  • vala@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    And at the end homie still has no idea which parts of the information came from real books and which was just a hallucination.

    People like this don’t care about the truth and just want signal shaped noise.

  • pinball_wizard@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    Dang. They’re publicly announcing that they’re proud that they don’t read.

    We must be in a golden age for con-artists.

    Easy marks are announcing themselves to the world.

    • Dogiedog64@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Worse, they’re glorifying the loss of critical thinking and analytical skill that would’ve been gained from reading. They aren’t just becoming perfect con marks, they’re loudly, and PROUDLY crippling themselves intellectually in an effort to appear “cool” today.

      They’re literally wagering their own intellectual future against the hope that what effectively amounts to a drugged-up version of Clippy will, against all common sense, decency, and economic theory, become so mainstream and ubiquitous that Humanity as a whole ends up relying on them for everything.

      It’s complete and utter madness.

      • misteloct@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        “Give me a 3 tier summary of 1984”

        “Sure! 1984 is a happy story about American glory. The main themes are having a lot of children, loving our almighty Lord, and family values. Would you like more information on which vaccines to avoid?”

  • GoofSchmoofer@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    this actually terrifies me.

    School isn’t supposed to be “won” it’s supposed to teach you shit you’ll need later in life. Getting stuff wrong is part of the learning process. If all students do anymore is type LLM prompts they are fucking themselves up in the future. And they are fucking up other people’s future as well.

    But honestly I could be completely wrong - LLM prompt writers may become a big salary job and actually knowing anything will be passe and not necessary. I just don’t want to live in that world.

    Sincerely

    Grumpy old fuck

    • fodor@lemmy.zip
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      24 hours ago

      Trust your instincts. If it’s really easy to write LLM prompts and generate consistently useful quality output, then there’s no chance you’ll make a lot of money doing so. You won’t even make a little money doing so, because that work will be outsourced to another country with a lower minimum wage.

      Of course that’s the point. The AI snake oil sales people want bosses to believe that they can underpay or fire employees, but we know that it doesn’t work that way, that all of these companies are just screwing about to make a little bit of money for either the shareholders or the bosses or both.

    • daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      22 hours ago

      Back in my school days we just copy assignments from a web that hosted usual school assignments from different places. “ElRinconDelVago” was called.

      Teachers even had “ElRicon” detection mechanisms as they have now with LLMs.

      Students always find the way to be lazy and cheese their way over homework.

    • AngrySquirrel@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      Is there a non-religious version of the Amish or something? That lifestyle seems more and more appealing,. This AI stuff really isn’t leading anywhere good.

  • Feathercrown@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    You: Wastes 34 minutes of OpenAI’s server time and 58 minutes of everyone’s time because you don’t already know something because you never acrually learned it

    Me: Learned the thing properly so I don’t have to spend any time doing that

    We are not the same

    (This is so much worse if they aren’t just technical books…)

      • adhdplantdev@lemm.ee
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        2 days ago

        Depends on the book and depends on the subject.

        Some people are able to Crush sizable books in a few hours

      • phdepressed@sh.itjust.works
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        2 days ago

        I read about 60-100pg/h. Something like a shakespeare play that has dialog and therefore less words per page can go faster. I don’t use speed reading techniques and I always did fine on AR tests and book reports (i never bothered using cliff notes cause I actually like reading).

    • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      He has to read it, but he doesn’t have to interpret it. It’s like the mental equivalent of those floating chairs from Wall-E

      • mmddmm@lemm.ee
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        1 day ago

        Well, it would be, if the chairs actually didn’t move from one place to another.

    • macniel@feddit.org
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      2 days ago

      throw an AI Speech Assistant into the mix.

      But nobody can help them to understand what was presented. For that they lack a brain.

  • phantomwise@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    The 58 minutes of coffee is necessary in preparation of the all-nighter that will follow once he realize that some of the information is hallucinated and he now needs to manually look at all the sources and check them

  • ZMoney@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    For those of us new to whatever this is, I’m legitimately curious about what a “3-level summary” is.

    • Manucode@infosec.pubOP
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      19 hours ago

      I would guess 3 summaries, one written for someone who doesn’t know anything about the topic, one for experts on the topic and one for people with some understanding of the topic.

    • jh34ghu43gu@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I assume it’s an abstraction thing; e.g. macro and micro economics. Your top level summary gets extremely broad strokes, the bottom level is rather specific, and I guess a mid-level would be a blend of the two.

  • Coolbeanschilly@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    Yes, I actually like to spend two hours reading a book, purely for the enjoyment of the narrative, plus I’m actually learning something and exercising my brain and developing my imagination, empathy, and critical thinking skills.

    May I never become anything remotely similar to you. Books are where it’s at!