Yep. And I mentioned this here before. I think the others also made the same mistake and, while I correct them and they reply they learned their lesson, the next time they make the same mistake. They insist on using bash.
It doesn't remember anything, it doesn't learn from experience. It just regurgitates what it's been fed. It's completely pointless to have a 'discussion' with an AI.
In our corp. we were forced to take 8hr+ online AI training. Training that required attention as it had some interactive elements to it.
One task was to interact with a bot and explain her (I think bot had girl's name) my problem and ask for solution. I refused to do that, I kept asking her about her problem trying to bypass her constraints.
Suddenly the reference from Futurama popped up in my head: "oh dear, she's stuck in an infinite loop, and he's an idiot."
While I understand and appreciate the "Crutch" principal I worry it negates learning. Some crutch ok but all crutches?
I am struggling to grasp programming and require assistance but the thought of using a machine to write code is unthinkable to me.
I remember back to Y2K and trying to get Dragon Dictates to work somewhat and just giving up. Looking at the box thinking what bullcrap.
Before that it was OCR and overhype.
I like to think I have outgrown hype.
Unfortunately my father is hooked. He is analyizing the Epstein papers with some AI slop. Great Cause Pops.
A Colorado consumer advocacy group says some of the newest toys on shelves this holiday season are equipped with artificial intelligence, and they may not be good for kids.
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