@inthehands This has been my near-universal experience with junior developers using ChatGPT.
It somehow *feels* amazingly productive and helpful to them. One mentee did a mini-postmortem on a project that didn't go well, and really, really, powerfully struggled with the cognitive dissonance between "chatgpt helped me be so productive, really useful!" and "I just spent 2 weeks instead of 2 hours on a task because I asked chatgpt instead of reading the documentation."
It’s broken record time again: We desperately need to do better at teaching ethics to people in STEM.
I’ve just reported an LLM project to the platforms it uses, as an imminent threat to life. It “enables a user to have an interactive dialogue about medical conditions, symptoms…” with ChatGPT.
It does NOT MATTER how many disclaimers you put in front of that. It is an imminent threat to life, and you will not implement it.
Prior to the arrival of large language models (LLMs) as seen with technologies like ChatGPT, the use of AI within the world of energy, particularly energy utilities and the electrical grid was defined by the massive data sets derived from the connectivity of the grid; the acceleration of renewables and grid technology that required the use of AI for management of variable power generation; and other similar trends.
Google ‘big data and energy‘ and you can get a sense of what was happening.
The phrase ‘smart grid’ was with us for years – and much of the ‘smart’ within the grid already involved AI.
Today? There is a lot more yet to come.
And it has little to do with ChatGPT.
It's another one in my series of AI Megatrends - and if you don't know what's going on, you should.
**#ai** **#technology** **#management** **#electrical** **#renewables** **#energy** **#powergeneration** **#utilities**
Here is your must-read article for the day, a profile of @emilymbender, and her efforts to deflate the ridiculous hype around large language models such as ChatGPT.
It's also about the people who are behind that hype, and about what their way of thinking has the potential to do to us.
It's worth reading all the way to the end.
https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/ai-artificial-intelligence-chatbots-emily-m-bender.html
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