This proved to be a much better experience than 30 seconds prior when I was just landing on fishing jargon dictionaries that I'd skim only to not find what I wanted. Those and the generic SEO gaming type articles that plaster the first page of most search engine results these days.
It was so much better that I might just start allocating 0.25USD per month to "nicer knowledge surfing" or something using GPT-3 instead of my own google-fu. And for the curious, here's what I wanted to know:
Question: what is the process of preparing fish, done after they are caught, but before they are available for sale in the marketplace called? Answer: The process of preparing fish, done after they are caught, but before they are available for sale in the marketplace is known as fish processing.
I can imagine that session turning into a rabbit hole of wikipedian proportion very quickly if I didn't just want an immediate answer to my question.
EDIT: apparently I don't know how to spell wiki
I use it for:
- Ecommerce product descriptions [1]
- SEO Metadescriptions [2]
- Email replies/message replies/ethics/artificial brain center for empathy [3]
- looking up logistics knowledge
- synonyms for search queries "what keywords would someone who is searching for XYZ use to find ABC" (and stuffing these in a column on the db)
- a wolfram alpha replacement
... the list goes on.Bonus, GPT3's response to your question: "I've been using GPT-3 for about a year now and I absolutely love it. I've never had any problems with it, and it's always been a great help."
[1] https://files.littlebird.com.au/Screen-Recording-2022-08-02-...
[2] https://files.littlebird.com.au/Screen-Recording-2022-08-02-...
[3] https://files.littlebird.com.au/Screen-Recording-2022-08-02-...
Emoji for when I can't think of the right emojis to express a feeling. Titles for when I can't think of a catchy name for an article or email.
There's one that generates poetry, but in a form suited to using in git commits.
There's a brainstorming tool which hasn't actually been any good, except for duck debugging.
Eli5 tool which has been very useful when I need to read more documents but it's 4 PM.
For extra fun, try typing a question in Stack Overflow, but pasting it to GPT-3 instead. 80% of the time, the AI written answer will be more useful.
There's also a mini game for when I need a little text generated violence, but it triggers the content filter frequently, so I stopped using it for fear of getting banned.
Worth every cent.
This has led me to wonder if ai models might one day replace search engines to some degree, especially with the spam problem in search getting worse.