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Have you tried using ChatGPT ?

You can make all sorts of specifications and parameters, but there are usually a few things that it will ignore. Fine tuning is time consuming.

Don't get me started on the excuses for incorrect output....I wasted a week trying to argue with a Bot to get a simple 5 second video done. I gave up in the end after a week of excuses....who'da thunk a Bot would argue with the User??? :rolleyes:

It was a great idea, but now I cannot be bothered with it.

Kinda like how anyone can pick up a guitar, but not all of them will be Steve Vai?

Sorry, I've just grown tired of being shat on and maligned for learning a new tool.
 
Kinda like how anyone can pick up a guitar, but not all of them will be Steve Vai?

Sorry, I've just grown tired of being shat on and maligned for learning a new tool.
I'm not bagging you at all for trying it out. I admire your perseverance with the system. I just got tired of the BS excuses I was getting - my experience may differ from that of other people .....as the saying here goes. :)

I still think what I was trying to achieve is funny, relevant and worth pursuing, but I'll try another method. :drinks:
 
I admit to not being very tech savvy. I do better with what is tactile. If I can see and touch it, I have a better chance to understand it.
This A.I. stuff is pretty serious. My brother in law is a college professor in upstate New York and says the majority of his students are using this crap to do homework. That is really troubling. This is changing people from critical thinkers to ones that rely on outside sources for information without any practical knowledge of whether it is right or not.
Example…
Say a guy wants to fix his car and consults an AI program. He is not an idiot but he does not have practical experience. Somehow, the AI program misinterprets the task or misses a crucial step. The car is now disabled and neither the man nor the AI program know how to correct it. Years ago when I was an apprentice Carpenter I was told that I must learn the basics because they will apply to everything. If I got good at one specific thing and ignored everything around me but that, I’d be worthless when the project was over because I would have been so narrowly focused In the trade.
If students devolve into people that only know how to find the answer rather than how to figure it out for themselves, they will be useless in a power outage or any area without a phone signal.
In the late 80s, I used to see hacks using nail guns when framing houses. In the early days when we were still driving nails, some guys that were slow seemed to think the nail guns would help them. What it did was help them do bad work much quicker. That same condition may be playing out with AI.
If it is used as a tool to enhance and not a replacement for your brain, it can be a good thing.
 
All tools, hardware and software, have a maturation process. The difference is that in the old days a company wouldn't put anything on the market until it was 95% accurate. But they paid for that testing.

Now since the AI apps, heck most apps, are basically free and the world is the testing department (they've conditioned folks that that approach is ok) we should not be suprised that the first 15 versions are filled with issues. Hell, my damn truck gets over air updates regularly and some fix one thing and break another.
 
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