With copilot included in Professional-grade Office 365 and some politician claiming that their government should use AI to be more efficient. I am curious on whether some of you did use “AI” to get some productive things done. Or if it’s still mostly a toy for you.

  • Caveman@lemmy.world
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    5 minutes ago

    I use it in two ways.

    ChatGPT as an interactive search. Last one was about EU GDPR compliance checklist to give a quick answer on what areas need to be looked at. I use it like once a week for work.

    Productive in othen ways I use it once a month for recipes. Recipes are probably my favourite since I can say “Write it using grams and ml” and "give me some options to replace eggs and it writes out a legit recipe based on these millions of annoying blogs recipes.

    Jetbrains AI auto complete for programming which is getting better slowly and I’m getting the hang of using it. It’s really good for cases where I have a common thing that I don’t remember the syntax of and I just type a name of a variable like “cspHeaderValue” and it will format thing that’s very annoying to look up based on what I some values I wrote above.

    I’m not a 10x engineer now for it, it’s more like +10% overall and really depends on the task. I can see it go up to around +50% but an AI plateau might come before then.

  • spittingimage@lemmy.world
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    29 minutes ago

    I don’t use AI for productive work, for the same reasons I don’t stir my soup with a dishrag.

    Pretty good for recipes, tho’.

  • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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    37 minutes ago

    When I had a mold problem it was affecting my mind. I couldn’t think straight or focus, so I had ChatGPT make me a step by step plan for dealing with it, and it had it break each step down into nested sub-steps until no step was more than five minutes of effort, then I had it format the plan to copy-paste into workflowy.

    It was really helpful. I could have made that plan myself, except that I was fucked up.

  • DigitalDilemma@lemmy.ml
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    1 hour ago

    I have been this week, for the first time.

    I’m using Hugo to design a new website and Gemini has been useful in find the actual useful documentation that I need. Much faster and more accurate than trawling the official pages, and does a better job of providing relevent examples. It’s also really good at sensing what I’m actually asking, even if I’m clumsy at the phrasing.

    And for those who continue to say AI isn’t really useful for learning - another thing I’ve been using it for. “write perl to convert a string to only container lowercase, converting any non-alpha chars to dashes” - I’ve learned how to do stuff like that over and over again, but the exact syntax falls out of my head after a few months of not doing it. AI is good at providing a quick recollect. I’ve already learned perl properly (including from paper books - yes, I first wrote perl a quarter of a century ago) - and forgotten it so many times. AI doesn’t prevent me learning, just makes it faster.

  • 9point6@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    Pretty useful for software engineering, particularly helpful in writing a test suite, you still need to actually check the output though ofc

    Also made use of it for writing my end of year review to solve the blank page problem, I find it a lot easier to edit down than starting HR stuff like that entirely from scratch

  • Miss Millie@lemmy.ml
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    6 hours ago

    I used AI to generate random fake data to use in training on Excel , also to understand various concepts in my feild of study and to answer my sudden random questions

  • FeelzGoodMan420@eviltoast.org
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    8 hours ago

    I use it as a glorified Google search since Google search is absolute dogshit these days. But that’s about it. ChatGPT is one of the most over hyped bullshit I’ve ever seen in my life.

    • akkajdh999@programming.dev
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      2 hours ago

      Absolutely agree!! LLMs are good for quick “shallow” search for me (stuff I would find on google in a few minutes). Bad for “deeper” learning (because it’s not capable of doing it). It’s overhyped.

    • Jo Miran@lemmy.ml
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      7 hours ago

      You shouldn’t use it for search like that. They (Gemini and ChatGPT) love to be confidently incorrect. Their perfect grammar trick you into believing their answers, even when they are wildly inaccurate.

      • thebestaquaman@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        I use GPT in the sense of “I need to solve X problem, are there established algorithms for this?” which usually gives me a good starting point for actual searching.

        Most recent use-case was judging the similarity of two strings: I had never heard of “Levenschtein distance” before, but once I had that keyword it was easy to work from there.

        Also: cmake and bash boilerplate

      • Damage@feddit.it
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        3 hours ago

        I use FastGPT on Kagi and it lists the sources for its conclusions, so it’s like a better aimed search

      • bassomitron@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        Copilot is actually linked directly into their search engine and it provides the links it pulls its data from. But you’re correct, ChatGPT is not hooked into the live internet and should not be used for such things. I’m not sure if Gemini is or not since I haven’t used it or looked into it much, so I can’t comment on it.

  • nocturne@sopuli.xyz
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    7 hours ago

    I wanted to update the logo for my business, I tried hiring an artist though a number I know from having working for various comic cons. No luck, so I went to friends i knew that were artists, got strung along with no results. Tried hiring via Craigslist and Reddit, got garbage.

    I was out $1600 with nothing to show for it except some sketches that were no where near what I wanted. So I tried using AI. It was horrid. Anything that was half decent was cropped and unusable.

    • bassomitron@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      FYI, in the future, just use Fiverr. I had the same problems when helping my wife get her business logo created. People either wanted a ridiculous amount of money for a simple logo ($1500+ and formal contracts) or like $100-200 just for prototyping to start and then another $100-200 for final image (the latter was commonplace on the freelance artist subreddits). I went with a couple artists on Reddit and they completely missed on what she wanted, despite us providing ample examples and our own rough sketch ideas.

      She ended up finding a local artist through a friend who captured the logo exactly how she pictured it, and it ended up costing around $150. Ironically, I didn’t know she did that, and I’d hit up a random artist on Fiverr who came very close to what the local artist did and it was only like $50.

      Sorry for the tangent, I was just somewhat surprised at how complicated and potentially expensive getting a simple logo created. I know artists gotta eat, but some of them wanted more than what plumbers or electricians ask for, which is crazy to me.

    • NineMileTower@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      I have graphic design experience and a whole bunch of free time at work. I’d be willing to do whatever you need for free.

  • webghost0101@sopuli.xyz
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    7 hours ago

    It taught me the way of unix.

    I used to be afraid of the terminal in linux. Now i am eager to try openbsd.

  • DashboTreeFrog@discuss.online
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    8 hours ago

    I use it to summarize work notes.

    My work often involves talking a lot of observation notes and I used to spend a lot of time sifting through them to make the actual summaries and analyses. Now AI basically does my first draft and I can even ask it to highlight examples of different things from my notes. It honestly saves me a lot of time and effort but also proves to me that on it’s own, AI still isn’t good enough to beat a real human expert, it’s just WAY faster and gets me like 70~80% of the way there in seconds. I was at a conference just a few weeks back and found at least one other person in my field of work doing the same and a lot more people were looking to adopt it for this kind of use specifically after our discussions.

    • Jo Miran@lemmy.ml
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      7 hours ago

      This practice is banned at our company and it is a fireable offence. We also do not allow for code to be shown or shared on Teams. If there is ANY confidential information or even proprietary internal subject matters in your notes, you are essentially feeding it to the AI to plagiarize.

      • DashboTreeFrog@discuss.online
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        7 hours ago

        Nothing that would be proprietary, I don’t work in software or tech. And a simple find and replace all gets rid of any confidential or personal information before I paste it into any AI. Redacting and/or concealing confidential info has been a thing I’ve had to do way before AI

  • NoiseColor @lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    I use it all the time. I can’t imagine my work or my life without it. I need it to work as a designer. I use it to brainstorm, I use image generation for everything from moodboards to helping me with final designs. I’ve started to also program, because for a lot of tasks I don’t need a developer anymore.

    I use it to help me write emails, social media posts, to translate,… I use it to ask for any trivia I’m interested in during the day. I use it for music recommendations,…

    I could probably go on… But my work, my job is completely different than it was a year ago.

  • ddh@lemmy.sdf.org
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    8 hours ago

    I’ve used it productively this week by…

    • Summarising and finding relevant parts of Microsoft Teams meetings.
    • Finding relevant parts of the labyrinthine policies I have to comply with.
    • Quickly finding out what’s going on with corporate events in the market.
    • Generating SQL code instead of starting a blank query from scratch (I can never remember the exact way to declare various structures)
    • At home, feeding private documents into Ollama for insight and producing compliance reports.
    • Instructions for stepping through flashing some temperature sensors.
  • hoshikarakitaridia@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    Used it as a toy for the longest time but by now I had to do a lot of coding and I was actually able to make good use of code completion AI.

    Saved me about a quarter of my time. Definitely worth something. (FYI I use supermaven free tier).

    Also I’m using ChatGPT to ask dumb questions because that way I don’t have to constantly interrupt other people. And also as a starting point to research something. I usually start with ChatGPT, then Google specific jargon and depending on the depth of the topic I will read either studies, articles or forum threads afterwards.

    It did take me a long time to figure out which AI and when to use it, so mandating this onto the entire government is a gong show more than anything.

    No AI is not useless, but it’s always a very specific use case.

    If you’re interested, I suggest using the free ChatGPT version to ask dumb questions together with Google to get a feel for what you get. Then you can better decide if it’s worth it for you.

    • Jo Miran@lemmy.ml
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      7 hours ago

      The amount of shit we have to clean up from devs using AI generated code nowadays is insane. Some people are using it to generate the bulk of their code and the output can be trash tier.

      I was supposed to have a nice long weekend to rest and I spent most of it cleaning up after clients who pushed AI generated code into production that froze all data processing. Even after we found the problem and fixed it for them, the data didn’t catch up until yesterday afternoon. The entire holiday I had to spend with a laptop a few feet away on a Teams call because a dev used AI-gen code.

      I am not saying that it isn’t helpful to your situation. What I am saying is that a growing number of outfits are starting to depend on “devs” who’s code is mostly LLM generated, and they push it without understanding what it does or how it interacts with the environment they are deploying it in.

      • hoshikarakitaridia@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        Yeah. I think AI literacy is a real thing and should be taken seriously. Before generating everyone should internalize the boundaries and limitations of any model used.

        If you have a hammer, everything’s a nail. And that reflex exists with AI as well, so everyone who uses is has to be careful in regards to that.