How are you using AI in your work/personal life?

ckDOG

Well-known member
Dec 11, 2007
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I use gpt as a glorified search engine. I also tend to get wordy - no shocker to anyone here. So I'll use it to help condense writings. I also like using it for corporate check the box HR crap for goal setting and performance reviews. It's useful for admin type stuff but I've yet to find a way to actually help me to the financial part of my job better.

I've spent most of my career thinking about automating processes and such. I can't really picture a gpt type tool being able to accept broad instructions from me and do the same on whatever system it is I'm working on. If so, I guess I'm out of a job.
 

eckie1

Well-known member
Jun 23, 2007
3,595
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Curious of your use cases.
I’m a Java developer and we use Amazon Q as a plug-in on our IntelliJ IDE. It’s great as a local search engine or to give insight, but damn it can spit out some hot garbage. Giving you code that it has easy access to that won’t even compile, etc. I don’t think it’s much help with unit testing, either. But, damn…. I hope I’m able to retire as a software engineer. This stuff is far from perfect, but it has its moments.
 

She Mate Me

Well-known member
Dec 7, 2008
11,070
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Is that why most of the emails I get now start out with "I hope this email finds you well", or, "greetings, I hope this message finds you having a wonderful day" ?

I get that that's annoying, but I've got a friend who sells some very specific products nationwide. He uses AI to identify companies all over the place who have a use case for his products. Then he uses it to drill down to who in that company is making buying decisions and find their email addresses. AI crafts intro emails and he refines them.

It has been a very effective tool to get responses from what are effectively cold calls made less cold by AI.
 

JackShephard

Active member
Sep 27, 2011
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I used it recently to help me prepare for a job interview. It is great at taking your resume and suggesting answers for questions you may be struggling with. But again, only as a starting point. You have to refine the answers and make it personal to you. And don't try to regurgitate some AI generated scenario or answer bc companies are watching for that. But it really helped me prepare a couple of answers where I was struggling to come up with something.
 

dorndawg

Well-known member
Sep 10, 2012
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I don’t use it, I don’t plan to use it, and if I know something is from ai I ignore it.

I’m sure some there are some limited applications it is good for.
 
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The Peeper

Well-known member
Feb 26, 2008
13,902
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I use it in place of Google or Duck DuckGo and that's about it. It does a decent job of combining sources info and stitching that info together into a readable form instead of me having to read all of them to stitch together in my mind. I don't think using it like that is any worse than Googling a particular topic and reading all the different sources myself, if those sources are wrong then they are wrong as is the AI answer that summarized them for me. It's also good if you want to take a photo of something and ask what it is
 

RopeDawg

Active member
Feb 24, 2023
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I actually sell specialized AI software depending on what type of business you own.
 

ETK99

Well-known member
Jul 30, 2019
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I use it a ton now. Create reports, presentations, and even to get different ideas about how I do things. I'm teaching it to take my job I hope.
 

Maroon Eagle

Well-known member
May 24, 2006
17,428
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I use it to compose emails that I don’t want to type out. Have to proof read it for sure but way quicker than doing a couple drafts. Other than that the only thing I recall using it for is to make a picture of a tranny TOSU fan for one of my insufferable friends that is a buckeye.
I may look into using it to compose emails.

I’m old school.

Invariably I’ll have an email that I compose, keep it in my drafts, and edit until it looks right to me before I send it…
 

dickiedawg

Well-known member
Feb 22, 2008
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I may look into using it to compose emails.

I’m old school.

Invariably I’ll have an email that I compose, keep it in my drafts, and edit until it looks right to me before I send it…

I do this sometimes. I’ll get it to write something, then invariably have to tell it to make it more casual, then tell it absolutely no exclamation points.
Then rewrite about 70% of it. Saves a ton of time** (I realize I could be more specific in my initial prompt)

It is a starting point. And as far as looking stuff up, I think of it like Wikipedia when I was in school. “Wikipedia is not a source,” teachers would say. No, but it tells me where to find the source. I know even before that they had to say “You can’t cite google!”
 
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JDuck17

New member
Sep 12, 2012
12
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I like it for contract review. Dump the contract into gpt and ask it to summarzie and give you the postives and negatives.

i also dropped a ton of sales data and asked for a chart to summarize and then it provided the ppt. Useful stuff imo.
 

DerHntr

Well-known member
Sep 18, 2007
15,441
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I recently took a sweat test during a morning run. Then I input the data to ChatGpt and told it to make me a daily hydration strategy and one for different length races. It has worked well so far.

Also, I’m a schweaty bastard