AI and it's usefulness in everyday life?

   / AI and it's usefulness in everyday life? #81  
My issue with this, If you turn off the "deep think" which shows it's reasoning, and just look at the answer, it puts out a pretty good sounding answer, but its wrong. When you read it's thought part, in this specific case, it's making a general assumption that, being an industrial city. it likely had a foundry, that it likely supplied materials to CSA, and was likely a target of destruction in the 1864 Battle of Palatka.

But its "answer" is Yep, destroyed in 1864 and never restarted.

I continued questions about this specific Battle, which apparently was more of a raid. It atleast got the CS leader right, Captain JJ Dickinson, which is accurate, i read a local book about him, and his campaign.

But, then, I started a brand new query, and asked about the specific march 1864 raid, and what was damaged; and once again, it guessed likely dock yards, lumber mills, and cotton facilities, as well as rail facilities. BUT, no mention of a foundry.

It's like it's taking very very surface level, "more likely than not" guesses, and stating them as facts.

It's guessing what where likely industries and likely military and economic targets, and then it is assuming they were targeted.
Maybe it was destroyed in 1864 and this area or someone close bought 250 of the manholes in 1863 and didn't use them for 30 years. Manholes don't rot.
 
   / AI and it's usefulness in everyday life?
  • Thread Starter
#82  
Maybe it was destroyed in 1864 and this area or someone close bought 250 of the manholes in 1863 and didn't use them for 30 years. Manholes don't rot.
Eagle found on Sunbiz it was an operation business until 1935. I was able to pretty quickly Google a civil case against in in 1925, and I'm 80% i saw a 1928 mention of it.

Also, pretty sure nobody was using closed sewage collection in early 1860s, in FLa.

As for not rotting, a 100 year old manhole lid does certainly show its age. Thats what made me first Google it maybe a year ago. We were spotting utilities for a bore, and opened a Very old looking lid, "palatka foundry", now Yes, I 100% know that most cities have their name case into their lids, but this lid wasn't in Palatka.

Also, yes, I have (in a former life) installed a Jacksonville lid (JEA to be specific) on a St Johns County sewer manhole...

This isn't really a comment about manholes, just the AI was taking guesses, and spit balling basically. It's logic chain made some pretty big leeps
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   / AI and it's usefulness in everyday life?
  • Thread Starter
#83  
Maybe the lesson is, you need to interact, and interrogate the AI. I probably should have asked it for the original source material for the destruction/damage. I'm still not against using it, and I'm glad I turned on the "thoughts process" chat.

It still can be a useful tool. Heck, I had it spit me out a recipe for a dinner idea tonight, which was B- dinner, with stuff we had laying around, so I'll take that as a win. Even then, I read it's logic chain, and because I mentioned i had 1# of lean ground beef, it's logic chain mentioned, "lean ground beef likely men's I want a heavy dinner, without using excess heavy cream or". Nope, lean ground beef was on sale.

But, the exercise with the manhole, makes me sure I would really want to scan over the manufacturer specs on that radiator I post way up top before considering it. It also makes me wonder if it didn't make the Form up, that I couldn't find any record of existing in another query.
 
   / AI and it's usefulness in everyday life?
  • Thread Starter
#84  
So, we recently have had a couple threads on dust control on private roads. Rather than post AI to that thread, I figured I'd try running it on this. Now, I think I know something about the topic, but it had something I'd never heard of, a bi-product of paper production. Now, is it effective, realistic, or even available? I don't know, but its an angle that I never thought of, that Could warrant a 2nd look.

"To effectively control dust on gravel roads while maintaining cost efficiency, consider the following structured approach:"

Organic Binders**
- **Lignin Sulfonate**:
- **Pros**: Biodegradable, binds gravel, lasts months. Often cost-effective if sourced locally (paper industry byproduct).
- **Cons**: May require reapplication after heavy rain.
 
   / AI and it's usefulness in everyday life? #86  

@paulsharvey​

Lignin Sulfonate:** A byproduct of paper mills, binds dust for 6–12 months. Check local availability from paper mills for bulk discounts.
Lignin Sulfonate, sometimes nicknamed tree sap.

I used it for a few years and really liked it. It worked just as good as any of the salt brines that other companies applied. The best thing about it - it is not a salt based product. I would still be using it but the guy that owned the company that applied it, moved far away and he didn't want to drive that far. There are plenty of gravel roads here in Iowa, his business will be just fine where ever he lands.
 
   / AI and it's usefulness in everyday life? #87  
When I left the corporate world and bought this place, a big plus was NO cell service. We got rid of ours in 2007 and it has been a blessing in my life. From being on call 24/7 to you can't reach me I'm hunting tree rats/mushrooms and will get back when I get back....
Not for everyone but works for me
I have been on call 24/7 for nearly 30 years. About 15 years ago the company priced a charter company to fly to yellow stone to get me if something happened. I wouldn't know what to if I were like you.

Back to ai, I have gotten lazy and use chatgpt to write a python script to any api that I don't want to or can't find info on. It had made life easier.
 
   / AI and it's usefulness in everyday life? #88  
I have been on call 24/7 for nearly 30 years. About 15 years ago the company priced a charter company to fly to yellow stone to get me if something happened. I wouldn't know what to if I were like you.

Back to ai, I have gotten lazy and use chatgpt to write a python script to any api that I don't want to or can't find info on. It had made life easier.
I did free support for several big accounts for a year when I walked away. All custom stuff and I had to get someone else up to speed. I just had enough and back to basics, bought a campground and then retired last year now just homestead the place.

Have not missed my cell for a moment....
 
   / AI and it's usefulness in everyday life? #89  
I have been on call 24/7 for nearly 30 years. About 15 years ago the company priced a charter company to fly to yellow stone to get me if something happened. I wouldn't know what to if I were like you.

Back to ai, I have gotten lazy and use chatgpt to write a python script to any api that I don't want to or can't find info on. It had made life easier.
I was on call 24/7 at my last job. I planned a vacation to go camping in the woods with my young family. My boss was really upset and asked how he would get ahold of me if needed. I told him to paste a note to a box turtle and maybe I'd find it.

Then we had a long discussion on why his practice of divide and conquer of his employees so that all of us were specialists and no one knew how to do anyone else's job would someday come back to bite him, and with any luck, the place wouldn't self destruct while I was gone. It didn't, and he started to allow cross training.
 
   / AI and it's usefulness in everyday life? #90  
I was on call 24/7 at my last job. I planned a vacation to go camping in the woods with my young family. My boss was really upset and asked how he would get ahold of me if needed. I told him to paste a note to a box turtle and maybe I'd find it.

Then we had a long discussion on why his practice of divide and conquer of his employees so that all of us were specialists and no one knew how to do anyone else's job would someday come back to bite him, and with any luck, the place wouldn't self destruct while I was gone. It didn't, and he started to allow cross training.
We have tried to hire people to replace me for years. The schools are crap and we are in the middle of nowhere. The people that live here can't grasp the technology. Most can't spell vlan. Everyone else won't live here.
 

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