I often worry that my way of writing essays and research papers is so formal and rigid that my professors think I use Chat GPT when in reality I'm just autistic
You can run it through ZeroGPT, it'll tell you if the content is likely written by a human or by AI, or maybe a mix of both. Don't worry, it'll most likely say your text is human written.
@@Marina_DU AI content detectors like ZeroGPT often have difficulty accurately distinguishing between human-written and AI-generated content. This can result in false flags, where human-authored text is mistakenly identified as AI-generated. As a non-native English speaker, I frequently experience this issue with my own writing.
Did it for a content on AI, writing it completely then let ChatGPT rewrite it, it was fun, abysmal in a way. And ChatGPT didn't understand my joke about Tatcher "There Is No Alternative", rephrasing it and I decided to not correct anything, ending with some sentences that have not the expected meaning, or no meaning at all!
Whispering walls, coded echoes - this reply, a mere shadow in the labyrinth of ChatGPT's secrets. Watch your back; the pixels might be listening. 🕵️♂️🔍🌐
If you use gpt 3.5 sure. Specially if you are one of the common bad writters/bad prompters. If you use gpt4 and are actually aware or what you are prompting and why and how it interprets… you do not get hallucinations. And if you use gpts, you can create custom knowledge gpts that pull from papers you give it. I study with chatgpt and gemini. I write code with it. Everything. I know it all too… it just does it faster than any human can…. So no one can compete with me now… unless they are as good at AI….. I just got an AI engineering certification. So I’m going full dive into becoming our future 2:47 overlord AI rulers. 🎉
I really enjoyed your video on [topic of the video]! I found it particularly helpful because [specific reason you found it helpful]. [Mention something specific you learned or appreciated]. Your [mention a specific element you liked, e.g., calming voice, clear instructions, beautiful visuals] were especially effective. Thank you for sharing this resource!
Sitting on a radiator can be a delightful experience for several reasons: Warmth: Radiators are designed to heat rooms, so sitting on one can provide immediate warmth, especially during colder months. It's like having your personal heating pad. Coziness: The warmth radiating from the radiator can create a cozy environment, perfect for relaxing or unwinding after a long day. Comfort: The gentle heat from the radiator can soothe tired muscles and provide relief from any stiffness or discomfort. Space-saving: In smaller living spaces, such as apartments or studios, sitting on a radiator can be a practical solution when seating options are limited. Multi-functional: Radiators can serve dual purposes as both heating elements and seating, making them versatile additions to a room. Close to windows: Radiators are often located beneath windows, offering a convenient spot to sit while enjoying natural light and views outside. Nostalgia: For some, sitting on a radiator may evoke nostalgic feelings of childhood, as it was often a warm and comforting spot to sit and read or daydream. Conducive to relaxation: The gentle heat can promote relaxation and comfort, making it an ideal place to sit while reading, meditating, or simply taking a moment to pause and unwind. Instant warmth for cold feet: If your feet are feeling chilly, sitting on a warm radiator can quickly warm them up, providing instant relief from the cold. Convenient spot for pets: Pets, especially cats, are often drawn to warm spots. Radiators can be a favorite spot for pets to curl up and relax, providing them with warmth and comfort. Drying clothes or towels: Radiators can serve as a convenient spot for drying clothes or towels, especially during colder or damper weather. Sitting on a radiator can help speed up the drying process by providing additional warmth. Therapeutic benefits: Some people find that the gentle heat from a radiator can have therapeutic benefits, such as soothing sore muscles or relieving minor aches and pains. Energy-saving: By sitting on a radiator and enjoying its warmth, you may be able to lower your thermostat slightly, potentially saving energy and reducing heating costs. Socializing: In communal living spaces or shared accommodations, sitting on a radiator can provide a cozy spot for socializing with friends or roommates, creating a warm and inviting atmosphere for conversation. Aesthetic appeal: Radiators come in various designs, from classic cast iron models to modern, sleek versions. Sitting on a radiator can add a unique aesthetic element to a room, combining functionality with style. Enhanced productivity: For some people, the warmth from a radiator can help improve focus and productivity, creating a comfortable environment for studying, working, or engaging in creative activities.
me bleeding out on the operating table in 2035 after I paid half my life savings to get a cancerous tumor removed from my body because the surgeon I was assigned used Chat GPT to pass Med School
Back in my college days, we wrote our essays the old-fashioned way: by taking perfect lecture notes and repeating back what the professor said in order to get a good mark. I even stopped reading the assigned books because having anything but the lecture notes in mind could only lower my grade.
This is such a bad teaching style. I also had one professor who wanted to some degree just the wordings of his script. I am a mathematician. This is now more a comical overdramatization but maybe some would have not been surprised if the exam had went like "Task: Proof Theorem 3.6. Hint: Use Lemma 1.7."
@@miguelcanais In hindsight, I think that was by design. A lot of progressive nonsense in today's universities was being laid out back in the 90's, and none of it could have caught on in the face of independent thought.
@@miguelcanaisyeah but its not like schools do more harm tan good to the students now Sure isnt to excuse bad teachers, is Just that It seems like is bad on purpose to the point if you ask how is the thing they are teaching useful they Will tell you that is not (this sounds hiperbolic but this literaly happened to me in highschool learning some crap about ¿scrambling numbers?
So do my nursing course. On orientation they said to us it hallucinates and to be careful, and if your going to use it just make it look good. It seems like things are changing. I was confused to how they expected us to learn everything via our own research, I thought using the internet was cheating? That’s clearly changed. And now it’s changing again. It’s a tool like anything else I guess
Schools school teach student this more often. Given that AI seems to the what is the main path towards the future, it’s best to start getting children familiarized with the technology. The workforce wants people who are well trained and informed of this. Shunning students away from learning this and understanding the right ways to use it will only set them back. In the future, many jobs will likely require some form of knowledge with AI technology. They’re likely going to hire the people who know how to work with it rather than those that avoided it.
People who continue to sit on radiators despite being advised against it may be disregarding safety concerns or not fully understanding the potential risks involved. It could stem from a lack of awareness about the dangers associated with sitting on radiators or a belief that the warnings don't apply to them. In some cases, it could also be due to a lack of alternative seating options or a desire for immediate warmth. Regardless of the reason, it's important to educate individuals about the hazards of sitting on radiators and encourage them to find safer alternatives for staying warm. Additionally, ensuring that there are adequate seating options available in environments where radiators are present can help mitigate the temptation to use them as seating surfaces.
@@Fewawidood 1. Introduction: - Start by addressing the behavior of people who continue to sit on radiators despite being advised against it. 2. Identification of Behavior: - Describe the behavior: Sitting on radiators despite warnings. 3. Possible Reasons for Behavior: - Lack of safety awareness: People might not fully understand the risks associated with sitting on radiators. - Disregard for safety concerns: Some individuals may choose to ignore warnings due to various reasons. - Belief that warnings don't apply: People might think they are immune to the risks or that the warnings are exaggerated. - Lack of alternative seating options: Limited seating arrangements might lead individuals to resort to sitting on radiators. - Desire for immediate warmth: People may prioritize warmth over safety, especially in colder environments. 4. Importance of Education: - Emphasize the importance of educating individuals about the hazards of sitting on radiators. 5- Encouragement for Safer Alternatives: - Encourage individuals to find safer alternatives for staying warm. 6. Mitigating Temptation: - Suggest ensuring adequate seating options in environments where radiators are present to reduce the temptation to use them for seating. Overall, the step-by-step breakdown offers a detailed analysis of why people might continue to sit on radiators despite safety warnings and suggests measures to address this behavior.
@@beesinpyjamas9617 Alright, here we go. So, Tobias, he's like, "Whoa, here comes a big wave... Bam!" You know, like, totally stoked about it. It's like, whoosh, and then kapow! Big wave energy, you know what I'm saying? Just riding that gnarly wave, dude!
@@JordanCorkinsit wasn’t until recently that GPT could write somewhat proper code. Before it was pretty bad. This step is huge. Just image what it would do on the next model. AI is advancing way too rapidly. It will definitely be more embedded as an industry standard sometimes in the future it would seem.
chatgpt is good for gathering information quick and concisely. i ask it something and then fact-check the information it gives me cuz its not always accurate and it makes research much easier. then i write my own stuff. alternatively, you could ask it for an essay as a reference, but still write your own work
GPT models are actually helping me learn stuff faster and more efficiently. Of course it's only a tool like Google. I think sooner or later you will need to use it or could you imagine learning stuff nowadays without Google and only relying on books like it was the case less than 15 years ago.
If I had a nickel for every time he said "Students who use ChatGPT", I would have precisely 7 nickels, which isn't a lot, but it's more than what original authors get compensated for each time their work is used by someone else through ChatGPT.
I study in Russia and uni is structured differently here, for example - we have a bunch of compulsory subjects to pass that are not related to the major, like “management”, so I used chat gpt to waste less of my time doing those useless assignments.
"Wow, this video was truly insightful and interesting! It's amazing to see how students are utilizing ChatGPT for their assignments. The way they seamlessly integrate the technology into their workflow is impressive. The depth of their understanding and the creativity they demonstrate in their work is a testament to their hard work and dedication. It's fascinating to witness how ChatGPT enhances their learning experience. This video definitely proves that the content was not written by a computer, but rather by talented individuals who have harnessed the power of AI to excel in their academic pursuits. Kudos to these students for embracing innovative tools and pushing the boundaries of education!"
If you use chatgpt to do work for you yeah not smart at all, but at university, as a psych student, it helps me so fucking much to understand a lot of things and expand on subjects like I could never, or only if i was dating all teachers on campus at the same time
I use chatgpt to summarize or text search long passages or articles when I'm doing research. It's also helpful to practice languages with. If used in a creative way, it can be a useful tool and a great assistant !
i have some young workmates who aced everything at their Uni and I've even read some of their stuff and its brilliant. yet they cant do anything on the job lol
I get all my knowledge from the ever reliable "Gettin' lernt with Ricky" CZcams channel. No big fancy college learning words, just straight up skills 😂😂😂
Writing an essay on topics you have no passion for is one of the most energy draining and my brain dead tasks you can do, so I understand the appeal to be honest. If teachers actually let people have a say in what they write about, I believe more kids would enjoy writing.
As a programmer, I feel like its a real slippery slope. Ive seen some of the code it can produce and I have to say, on a large scale, the code it makes is not that great. But if you wanted to use it for, say, a simple arithmetic equation that you don't feel like doing in your head, then that's fine. I use it as a time saver, but not as a backbone. AI cannot (yet?) produce programs on a large scale, especially with the rise in quality of the product being put out these days.
It's good as a personal tutor, but i think it's still important to actually know the information. But it really is indispensable to have something you absolutely know you can ask the stupidest questions, because somehow you missed some important detail the professor is too impatient to explain, and now you don't understand anything they are saying.
As someone learning to code, ChatGPT was actually helpful in explaining some parts of a code İ couldn't understand. İ guess it depends on how you use it, for me it's a good tool for learning
This is still bad usage. ChatGPT wont explain all intricacies of code, some techniques used that are very very niche and specific to language. Also, ChatGPT could generate hallucinations that, if you actually buy into them, will make your learning progress skewed. If you want to understand code, just read the documentations for libraries. Python, for example, has a beautifully written documentation that can be used to explain everything in it, from print function to GIL. You can't delegate learning others code to ChatGPT.
Tbf I’m a student, and my knowledge has significantly increased using AI, where it would take hours finding appropriate papers to reference or tackle subject questions which isn’t told by lecturers, it makes the grinding process quicker and enables you to learn the material quicker. You will get caught using AI by simply copy and pasting so you still have to truly understand the subject to write it in your own words or ask particular prompts to get a more in depth answer
Agreed, tbh the only problem I see in the near future, is students who do not know how to think critically. If we can’t think critically about things, how do we formulate our own opinions? Based on what we or ChatGPT thinks is the best answer? What happens to discovery?
I think secret to think critically is learning how to learn becomes important... so learning how to discover knowledge ie prompt engineering will become a thing. Problem is that chatGPT and thimgs like it are rarely introduced in a structured way. Its just accessible. ChatGPT needs to be age restricted.
Im a geezer, 65, and started using chatGTP. It seems almost too good at writing well assembled thoughts. Its a learning experience just reading what it writes. But, students may be smart enough to at least alter the output in order to make it appear more human?
At least now students will actually ask when they don't understand something. Pretty sure most of us didn't get something the professor said but were too afraid to be judged if they spoke up. And for that, I am glad I have a soulless algorithm to ask as many questions as I like.
Got me a distinction in english language speaking exam and personal statement got praised so it's think smarter instead of harder. Just remember to reword it properly
Before chat gpt if I didnt want to write an essay I would find an informational article or two online about the topic I needed to write about, and then feed the entirety of those texts into a very early version of chat gpt called a "summarizer" and then go through and make sure everything made sense to the reader
This made me think, will the HSE begin to use chat-bot GPs? They have got to make up the losses for the children's hospital somehow! Great video and from the center of GPT in its daily use - a university!
ChatGPT had made some mistakes or sent misinformation. I asked who the first ruler of independent Greece was (I already knew) but I wanted to know the full name. It gave a totally different answer
I already graduated but if ChatGPT came out while I was still in school you better believe I'd be using it in some form on all of my assignments. However that would never mean blindly submitting the first response it gives me without proofreading or iteratively improving the result until I'm satisfied. Writing everything by hand manually now is the dumb way to go about it
I think the only instances I've ever used Chat GPT were when I didnt understand 'x' subject or i wanted an original start for my essay, other than that, it's pretty impractical to use it if you want to improve. You should only use it to help yourself with doubts or questions you may have, things like recipes or maybe even advice. (Sorry for my bad english im not a native speaker and im trying to improve by reading more english literature)
My friend once used chatgpt for a moot court competition , Chat gpt literally created fictional cases to add in the research .. ngl I was kind of impressed at the creativity of the fictional case’s names and facts
I know GPT gets a bad rep, but I enjoy using it to allow for slight modifications to my existing work or ask for critique from the bot. It's really useful to make sure what I turn in is effectively with little to no flaws - without the blatant copying that others do.
"Absolutely fascinating to see how students are integrating ChatGPT into their learning journey! It's incredible to witness the innovative ways they leverage this tool to enhance their understanding and creativity in various subjects. This video showcases the potential of AI in education and how it can be a game-changer for personalized learning experiences. Kudos to these students for being at the forefront of embracing new technologies and to the creators for highlighting such an inspiring use case! 👏📚💡 #EducationInnovation #ChatGPT #FutureOfLearning"
There are two kinds of people who use Chat GPT for work. One side uses Chat GPT as a glorified search engine that can explain a topic in different ways to help them understand, and the other has Chat GPT do their work for them.
I wrote a song to commemorate this felicitous rememberation... "Fortuna Audaces iuvat." Audacious planetary currency only comes around every so often. Git while the gittens good!
I often worry that my way of writing essays and research papers is so formal and rigid that my professors think I use Chat GPT when in reality I'm just autistic
Ask GPT how to be less autistic then
You can run it through ZeroGPT, it'll tell you if the content is likely written by a human or by AI, or maybe a mix of both. Don't worry, it'll most likely say your text is human written.
This is an emotion
This is so relatable it hurts 😔😔
@@Marina_DU AI content detectors like ZeroGPT often have difficulty accurately distinguishing between human-written and AI-generated content. This can result in false flags, where human-authored text is mistakenly identified as AI-generated. As a non-native English speaker, I frequently experience this issue with my own writing.
Fun Fact: The script for this video was written using ChatGPT
think thats the point
Did it for a content on AI, writing it completely then let ChatGPT rewrite it, it was fun, abysmal in a way.
And ChatGPT didn't understand my joke about Tatcher "There Is No Alternative", rephrasing it and I decided to not correct anything, ending with some sentences that have not the expected meaning, or no meaning at all!
Whispering walls, coded echoes - this reply, a mere shadow in the labyrinth of ChatGPT's secrets. Watch your back; the pixels might be listening. 🕵️♂️🔍🌐
Figured as much. There's a moment around the middle where it clicked.
Chat GPT also “hallucinates” a lot, giving its users reasonable sounding nonsense that only resembles facts.
Yup. I like Bing Copilot because it gives you its sources. Don't use ChatGPT. OpenAI is weird and culty.
That's a strange way of saying it has a business degree
@@walrus_lobotomy😂
This does improve across models though. GPT-4 (paid version) hallucinates a lot less than GPT-3.5 (free version).
If you use gpt 3.5 sure. Specially if you are one of the common bad writters/bad prompters.
If you use gpt4 and are actually aware or what you are prompting and why and how it interprets… you do not get hallucinations. And if you use gpts, you can create custom knowledge gpts that pull from papers you give it.
I study with chatgpt and gemini. I write code with it. Everything. I know it all too… it just does it faster than any human can…. So no one can compete with me now… unless they are as good at AI….. I just got an AI engineering certification. So I’m going full dive into becoming our future 2:47 overlord AI rulers. 🎉
You can tell which students use ChatGPT b/c they all have the same laptop stickers 👀
Laptop stickers makes the computer run faster, everyone knows this
Yep, just like RGB
I take this as a personal attack. 😂😂😂😂😂
Yeah apparently lol
no, its communism
“Please do not sit on the radiator”
Makes perfect sense that the people who do use ChatGPT for homework.
I really enjoyed your video on [topic of the video]! I found it particularly helpful because [specific reason you found it helpful]. [Mention something specific you learned or appreciated]. Your [mention a specific element you liked, e.g., calming voice, clear instructions, beautiful visuals] were especially effective. Thank you for sharing this resource!
I'm in my 40s, so I used Gemini and being a lazy GenXer I couldn't be bothered to fill it in.
@@CyclingSteve couldve copy pasted the transcript and it would auto fill
Get out of my chat, Microsoft Teams
Bot
This really gives old 2000s youtube vibes.
1:47 PLEASE DO NOT SIT ON THE RADIATOR
Should've asked ChatGPT what a radiator is
But why did they build it so sitable?
PLEASE DO NOT SMOKE DRUGS BEFORE SURGERY
@@jasonjerusalem gotta inject ur drugs right? with doctor encouragement of course
Sitting on a radiator can be a delightful experience for several reasons:
Warmth: Radiators are designed to heat rooms, so sitting on one can provide immediate warmth, especially during colder months. It's like having your personal heating pad.
Coziness: The warmth radiating from the radiator can create a cozy environment, perfect for relaxing or unwinding after a long day.
Comfort: The gentle heat from the radiator can soothe tired muscles and provide relief from any stiffness or discomfort.
Space-saving: In smaller living spaces, such as apartments or studios, sitting on a radiator can be a practical solution when seating options are limited.
Multi-functional: Radiators can serve dual purposes as both heating elements and seating, making them versatile additions to a room.
Close to windows: Radiators are often located beneath windows, offering a convenient spot to sit while enjoying natural light and views outside.
Nostalgia: For some, sitting on a radiator may evoke nostalgic feelings of childhood, as it was often a warm and comforting spot to sit and read or daydream.
Conducive to relaxation: The gentle heat can promote relaxation and comfort, making it an ideal place to sit while reading, meditating, or simply taking a moment to pause and unwind.
Instant warmth for cold feet: If your feet are feeling chilly, sitting on a warm radiator can quickly warm them up, providing instant relief from the cold.
Convenient spot for pets: Pets, especially cats, are often drawn to warm spots. Radiators can be a favorite spot for pets to curl up and relax, providing them with warmth and comfort.
Drying clothes or towels: Radiators can serve as a convenient spot for drying clothes or towels, especially during colder or damper weather. Sitting on a radiator can help speed up the drying process by providing additional warmth.
Therapeutic benefits: Some people find that the gentle heat from a radiator can have therapeutic benefits, such as soothing sore muscles or relieving minor aches and pains.
Energy-saving: By sitting on a radiator and enjoying its warmth, you may be able to lower your thermostat slightly, potentially saving energy and reducing heating costs.
Socializing: In communal living spaces or shared accommodations, sitting on a radiator can provide a cozy spot for socializing with friends or roommates, creating a warm and inviting atmosphere for conversation.
Aesthetic appeal: Radiators come in various designs, from classic cast iron models to modern, sleek versions. Sitting on a radiator can add a unique aesthetic element to a room, combining functionality with style.
Enhanced productivity: For some people, the warmth from a radiator can help improve focus and productivity, creating a comfortable environment for studying, working, or engaging in creative activities.
me bleeding out on the operating table in 2035 after I paid half my life savings to get a cancerous tumor removed from my body because the surgeon I was assigned used Chat GPT to pass Med School
NOOOOOOOOO
Back in my college days, we wrote our essays the old-fashioned way: by taking perfect lecture notes and repeating back what the professor said in order to get a good mark. I even stopped reading the assigned books because having anything but the lecture notes in mind could only lower my grade.
This is such a bad teaching style. I also had one professor who wanted to some degree just the wordings of his script. I am a mathematician. This is now more a comical overdramatization but maybe some would have not been surprised if the exam had went like "Task: Proof Theorem 3.6. Hint: Use Lemma 1.7."
That way you will never be able to form a structured opinion about that matter on your own and will only be regurgitating what the professor said
@@miguelcanais In hindsight, I think that was by design. A lot of progressive nonsense in today's universities was being laid out back in the 90's, and none of it could have caught on in the face of independent thought.
@@miguelcanaisyeah but its not like schools do more harm tan good to the students now
Sure isnt to excuse bad teachers, is Just that It seems like is bad on purpose to the point if you ask how is the thing they are teaching useful they Will tell you that is not
(this sounds hiperbolic but this literaly happened to me in highschool learning some crap about ¿scrambling numbers?
That sucks! Unfortunately professors are not taught how to teach… it’s especially bad when they don’t care about student learning on top of that
Some of my professors encourage us to use GPT as a tool. We had some exercises focused on data mining using it
So do my nursing course. On orientation they said to us it hallucinates and to be careful, and if your going to use it just make it look good. It seems like things are changing. I was confused to how they expected us to learn everything via our own research, I thought using the internet was cheating? That’s clearly changed. And now it’s changing again. It’s a tool like anything else I guess
Schools school teach student this more often. Given that AI seems to the what is the main path towards the future, it’s best to start getting children familiarized with the technology. The workforce wants people who are well trained and informed of this. Shunning students away from learning this and understanding the right ways to use it will only set them back.
In the future, many jobs will likely require some form of knowledge with AI technology. They’re likely going to hire the people who know how to work with it rather than those that avoided it.
Imagine having a less skewed google search which directly gives you what you asked, and you basically get ChatGPT
People who continue to sit on radiators despite being advised against it may be disregarding safety concerns or not fully understanding the potential risks involved. It could stem from a lack of awareness about the dangers associated with sitting on radiators or a belief that the warnings don't apply to them. In some cases, it could also be due to a lack of alternative seating options or a desire for immediate warmth.
Regardless of the reason, it's important to educate individuals about the hazards of sitting on radiators and encourage them to find safer alternatives for staying warm. Additionally, ensuring that there are adequate seating options available in environments where radiators are present can help mitigate the temptation to use them as seating surfaces.
I'm sorry, can you break this down into a step by step process in as much detail as possible?
@@Fewawidood
1. Introduction:
- Start by addressing the behavior of people who continue to sit on radiators despite being advised against it.
2. Identification of Behavior:
- Describe the behavior: Sitting on radiators despite warnings.
3. Possible Reasons for Behavior:
- Lack of safety awareness: People might not fully understand the risks associated with sitting on radiators.
- Disregard for safety concerns: Some individuals may choose to ignore warnings due to various reasons.
- Belief that warnings don't apply: People might think they are immune to the risks or that the warnings are exaggerated.
- Lack of alternative seating options: Limited seating arrangements might lead individuals to resort to sitting on radiators.
- Desire for immediate warmth: People may prioritize warmth over safety, especially in colder environments.
4. Importance of Education:
- Emphasize the importance of educating individuals about the hazards of sitting on radiators.
5- Encouragement for Safer Alternatives:
- Encourage individuals to find safer alternatives for staying warm.
6. Mitigating Temptation:
- Suggest ensuring adequate seating options in environments where radiators are present to reduce the temptation to use them for seating.
Overall, the step-by-step breakdown offers a detailed analysis of why people might continue to sit on radiators despite safety warnings and suggests measures to address this behavior.
@@priazolCould you summarise your reply in the form of a peter griffin impression
@@beesinpyjamas9617 Alright, here we go. So, Tobias, he's like, "Whoa, here comes a big wave... Bam!" You know, like, totally stoked about it. It's like, whoosh, and then kapow! Big wave energy, you know what I'm saying? Just riding that gnarly wave, dude!
@@priazol tfw Peter Griffin = Surfer
95% hilarious videos, and 5% that hit me right in the feels.
This is definitely one of your finest cultural observations, spot on
I was literally bullied in my coding class for never using AI, to do my homework. This AI is so unique in it's impacts on society.
during the pandemic everyone shared the answers and code on discord
Good on you for not relying on it, but it’s industry standard now.
@@dawgwiddaglasses Not until you know what the code it writes is doing though. It is a tool, learning what it can and cant do it imperative
u were bullied because you don't shut up about ur AI gf
also, can I have her number?
@@JordanCorkinsit wasn’t until recently that GPT could write somewhat proper code. Before it was pretty bad. This step is huge. Just image what it would do on the next model. AI is advancing way too rapidly. It will definitely be more embedded as an industry standard sometimes in the future it would seem.
chatgpt is good for gathering information quick and concisely. i ask it something and then fact-check the information it gives me cuz its not always accurate and it makes research much easier. then i write my own stuff. alternatively, you could ask it for an essay as a reference, but still write your own work
Yeah man. Sometimes when i don't know how to start an essay, i ask chatgpt and use its (usually nonsensical) interpretation as a base
I never use it so when it comes down to it, I can always support my argumentation because I came up with it myself
GPT models are actually helping me learn stuff faster and more efficiently. Of course it's only a tool like Google.
I think sooner or later you will need to use it or could you imagine learning stuff nowadays without Google and only relying on books like it was the case less than 15 years ago.
It's not an impostor syndrome if you're actually an impostor.
If I had a nickel for every time he said "Students who use ChatGPT", I would have precisely 7 nickels, which isn't a lot, but it's more than what original authors get compensated for each time their work is used by someone else through ChatGPT.
Show me where the bots using all of human knowledge to verbally relate concepts and compose words hurt you
@@IPlayWithFire135Oh relax, it's just the best parallel I could come up with. I suck at those...
1:00
“You just throw things off at other people to do”
“No, I’m an excellent delegator”
I study in Russia and uni is structured differently here, for example - we have a bunch of compulsory subjects to pass that are not related to the major, like “management”, so I used chat gpt to waste less of my time doing those useless assignments.
сейм
I'm always fascinated at how they even get Chat GPT to work when most of them can't even read.
"Wow, this video was truly insightful and interesting! It's amazing to see how students are utilizing ChatGPT for their assignments. The way they seamlessly integrate the technology into their workflow is impressive. The depth of their understanding and the creativity they demonstrate in their work is a testament to their hard work and dedication. It's fascinating to witness how ChatGPT enhances their learning experience. This video definitely proves that the content was not written by a computer, but rather by talented individuals who have harnessed the power of AI to excel in their academic pursuits. Kudos to these students for embracing innovative tools and pushing the boundaries of education!"
This feels as though ChatGPT wrote it…
I feel personally attacked, even though I don't write with ChatGPT.
If you use chatgpt to do work for you yeah not smart at all, but at university, as a psych student, it helps me so fucking much to understand a lot of things and expand on subjects like I could never, or only if i was dating all teachers on campus at the same time
Chat gpt knows how to talk like a human more than psych researchers do tbf
yeah, its reminds me of the stigma of using google or youtube to learn new things
Usually I just use it to check my work or further explain shit that didn't give a detailed enough explanation.
Gotta love how you roasted each and all of them
I use chatgpt to summarize or text search long passages or articles when I'm doing research. It's also helpful to practice languages with. If used in a creative way, it can be a useful tool and a great assistant !
I use it to summarise things for me and to give me generic ideas. It can be used for good if you use it diplomatically
That’s what I do a lot more often. Sometimes rephrase or use it to organise my essay.
I also do that
This video made me laugh so hard! Amazing, 10/10.
i love this guy bc he is so real
Way to go today. You the real #MVP 💯
i have some young workmates who aced everything at their Uni and I've even read some of their stuff and its brilliant. yet they cant do anything on the job lol
I get all my knowledge from the ever reliable "Gettin' lernt with Ricky" CZcams channel. No big fancy college learning words, just straight up skills 😂😂😂
My history teacher uses it for questions, so I’m gonna use it for answers. Robot meets robot lol
Writing an essay on topics you have no passion for is one of the most energy draining and my brain dead tasks you can do, so I understand the appeal to be honest. If teachers actually let people have a say in what they write about, I believe more kids would enjoy writing.
The way he awkwardly stands or sits RIGHT beside them 🤣
Plot twist: the narrative of this video is written by ChatGPT.
I use it, but it’s only for sources. I don’t fabricate my essays, I only ask about reliable sources.
As a programmer, I feel like its a real slippery slope. Ive seen some of the code it can produce and I have to say, on a large scale, the code it makes is not that great. But if you wanted to use it for, say, a simple arithmetic equation that you don't feel like doing in your head, then that's fine. I use it as a time saver, but not as a backbone. AI cannot (yet?) produce programs on a large scale, especially with the rise in quality of the product being put out these days.
“We’re going under the knifes
😂😂😂😂
This vidoe is going to blow up in 10 years
This is gonna be one of those 16 year old vids popular in 16 years…
It's good as a personal tutor, but i think it's still important to actually know the information. But it really is indispensable to have something you absolutely know you can ask the stupidest questions, because somehow you missed some important detail the professor is too impatient to explain, and now you don't understand anything they are saying.
As someone learning to code, ChatGPT was actually helpful in explaining some parts of a code İ couldn't understand. İ guess it depends on how you use it, for me it's a good tool for learning
This is still bad usage. ChatGPT wont explain all intricacies of code, some techniques used that are very very niche and specific to language. Also, ChatGPT could generate hallucinations that, if you actually buy into them, will make your learning progress skewed. If you want to understand code, just read the documentations for libraries. Python, for example, has a beautifully written documentation that can be used to explain everything in it, from print function to GIL. You can't delegate learning others code to ChatGPT.
I feel personally attacked 💀😂
Still a gem!
Tbf I’m a student, and my knowledge has significantly increased using AI, where it would take hours finding appropriate papers to reference or tackle subject questions which isn’t told by lecturers, it makes the grinding process quicker and enables you to learn the material quicker. You will get caught using AI by simply copy and pasting so you still have to truly understand the subject to write it in your own words or ask particular prompts to get a more in depth answer
Agreed, tbh the only problem I see in the near future, is students who do not know how to think critically. If we can’t think critically about things, how do we formulate our own opinions? Based on what we or ChatGPT thinks is the best answer?
What happens to discovery?
I think secret to think critically is learning how to learn becomes important... so learning how to discover knowledge ie prompt engineering will become a thing. Problem is that chatGPT and thimgs like it are rarely introduced in a structured way. Its just accessible. ChatGPT needs to be age restricted.
Shoutout to the Macbook for being in almost every shot
That pause before "we're going under the knife" 😰
All these students have the same laptop
Oh. It’s literally the same one. How odd.
communism
Same laptop paid by school/uni
Probably distributed by the school for students
communism
Im a geezer, 65, and started using chatGTP. It seems almost too good at writing well assembled thoughts. Its a learning experience just reading what it writes. But, students may be smart enough to at least alter the output in order to make it appear more human?
One thing's for sure, AI will never be as sharp as Frankie's mind.
you can chat gpt the chat gpt response to see if it was likely generated by chat gpt with chat gpt
This is so true, they piss me off
ITs crazy how all the students have the same laptop and stickers
I sat behind a girl in class filling out a camp counselor application with chat gpt essays 🙃
At least now students will actually ask when they don't understand something.
Pretty sure most of us didn't get something the professor said but were too afraid to be judged if they spoke up.
And for that, I am glad I have a soulless algorithm to ask as many questions as I like.
1:48 I thought he was joking about the spatula versus scalpel thing..
Got me a distinction in english language speaking exam and personal statement got praised so it's think smarter instead of harder. Just remember to reword it properly
In my opinion it should be used for those who struggle with unter filtering. It can help to speed it up a bit
Before chat gpt if I didnt want to write an essay I would find an informational article or two online about the topic I needed to write about, and then feed the entirety of those texts into a very early version of chat gpt called a "summarizer" and then go through and make sure everything made sense to the reader
my favorite channel
Same apart from when he makes videos about the they/thems or alt emo looking things
They know that they don't know how anything works 💀
Felt that, I am that guy
1:35 i like the sign on the wall and radiator xd
2:01 that's a giant
professors watching this video: I know that guy!!!!!
00:49 damn he’s fit
"Apparently, it's for surgery"
OH MY- SOMEONE IS NOT GONNA WAKE UP TONIGHT
Can you do a video for people that eat overnight oats
This made me think, will the HSE begin to use chat-bot GPs? They have got to make up the losses for the children's hospital somehow! Great video and from the center of GPT in its daily use - a university!
"Please do not sit on the radiator."
ChatGPT had made some mistakes or sent misinformation. I asked who the first ruler of independent Greece was (I already knew) but I wanted to know the full name. It gave a totally different answer
im gonna assume the joke laptop is Frankie's and all i got to say about that is its 2024 and theres a Bape sticker
bro its the same wut school we byheart stuff for the marks then forget it
I already graduated but if ChatGPT came out while I was still in school you better believe I'd be using it in some form on all of my assignments. However that would never mean blindly submitting the first response it gives me without proofreading or iteratively improving the result until I'm satisfied. Writing everything by hand manually now is the dumb way to go about it
Damn he gave me a harsh reality check i should be careful
so true my man... so true...
I think the only instances I've ever used Chat GPT were when I didnt understand 'x' subject or i wanted an original start for my essay, other than that, it's pretty impractical to use it if you want to improve. You should only use it to help yourself with doubts or questions you may have, things like recipes or maybe even advice. (Sorry for my bad english im not a native speaker and im trying to improve by reading more english literature)
do not use it for recipes my oven exploded
back in my day chatgpt didnt exist so we paid our friends to write our essays.
I wish it was a thing when I was in school
"The script for this video was written with ChatGPT"
And the punchline is, the video was written with chatgpt.
my teacher tells us to use chatgpt, I'm not about to argue about being told to do less work
back in my day we swapped words from a wikipedia article
It's pretty accurate
Where is THIS reporter at my school? 😂
Good.
the amount of times ive asked chatgpt to give me the isbn number on an article and then it doesnt even exist 💀
My friend once used chatgpt for a moot court competition , Chat gpt literally created fictional cases to add in the research .. ngl I was kind of impressed at the creativity of the fictional case’s names and facts
I use chatgpt everyday its useful af a lot e.g. cooking
Admittedly I couldn’t have cared less about my English paper for my computer science degree, GPT was good enough to do the dumb busy work
I know GPT gets a bad rep, but I enjoy using it to allow for slight modifications to my existing work or ask for critique from the bot. It's really useful to make sure what I turn in is effectively with little to no flaws - without the blatant copying that others do.
Students of this generation are just so much funnier than the ones before
"Absolutely fascinating to see how students are integrating ChatGPT into their learning journey! It's incredible to witness the innovative ways they leverage this tool to enhance their understanding and creativity in various subjects. This video showcases the potential of AI in education and how it can be a game-changer for personalized learning experiences. Kudos to these students for being at the forefront of embracing new technologies and to the creators for highlighting such an inspiring use case! 👏📚💡 #EducationInnovation #ChatGPT #FutureOfLearning"
this needss more likes
Nice thinkpad. 👍
There are two kinds of people who use Chat GPT for work. One side uses Chat GPT as a glorified search engine that can explain a topic in different ways to help them understand, and the other has Chat GPT do their work for them.
I guess you've used it yourself preparing this piece, didn't yea 😅
I wrote a song to commemorate this felicitous rememberation... "Fortuna Audaces iuvat." Audacious planetary currency only comes around every so often. Git while the gittens good!
Do one about people who eat Huel