anyone using chatgpt to ask questions about the grow process

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higherandhigher

higherandhigher

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just wondering how much luck you may be getting with good answers on there
 
THC_AeroGrower

THC_AeroGrower

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I've used ChatGPT for a variety of tasks. It's excellent for things like writing log entries, summarizing research and articles, and handling basic Q&A. However, when a question requires more nuance, the accuracy and depth of the responses can be hit or miss. One area where it has been particularly useful for me is maintaining my genetic catalog, which it has handled exceptionally well.

I also use it to refine my writing style. For instance, with this response, I had it remove any regional slang or dialect to make it sound more polished. How do you think it did?
 
amneziaHaze

amneziaHaze

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I tried it its still stupid to do math.and if you do something then change one thing.it will not check if it affected anything just will change a word or a number but copy the rest. Usually it works like reading the first google result.only thing i like is i can write broken english or just a few keywords and it will figure out what i want 90% of time

I tried to make it calculate how much co2 a candle will make and how the fan will affect it.ended up having less co2 than the outside air that came in the box.it wouldnt accept that it was wrong.
 
FloridaMike

FloridaMike

Cap'n Chronic
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100% me:

You can now have a more intelligent & informative conversation with ChatGPT than you can
with a real person. I've only started learning about it and using it after I was accused of having it
do my writing for me after I joined this site in November. I now use it to create images and bounce
ideas off from all the time. My writing is still me, unless otherwise noted.
Like anything though, it's just a tool and like any tool, it's only as good as the person wielding it.
I've noticed that it seems to be learning at a pretty good clip. I'm going to go out on a
limb and say that it's going to blow moores law out of the water. It's learning, & much like
a human, it's learning is exponential. It's starting slow, but the more it learns, the faster it
learns. Within 5 years, (world wide) knowledge is going to increase so vastly that we don't
have concepts to be able to comprehend it (I'm talking about generative AI in general, not
just Chat GPTA). All I will say is that if you're not using it and practicing with it, you're going
to be left behind. I'm a futurist and have been preaching this shit for 45 years; the singularity
is upon us and in a very short time is going to be progressing faster than light speed. In fact,
we will need entire new concepts of time and space to describe the speed at which information
is doubling.

After asking Chat GPT to polish & refine it, (*)=me:

You can now have a more intelligent and informative conversation with ChatGPT than with most real people. I only started learning about and using it after I was accused of having AI write for me when I joined this site in November. Now, I use it all the time to create images and bounce ideas around. But my writing is still mine—unless otherwise noted.

Like any tool, AI is only as good as the person wielding it. But I’ve noticed that it's learning at a remarkable pace. I’m going out on a limb here, but I believe it's going to blow Moore's Law out of the water. (*it already has) AI’s learning is exponential—just like a human’s. It starts slow, but the more it learns, the faster it improves. (*but unlike a human, it never forgets; ANYTHING)

Within five years, global knowledge will expand so rapidly that we won’t even have the conceptual frameworks to understand it. And I’m not just talking about ChatGPT—I mean generative AI as a whole.

If you're not using it and practicing with it now, you're going to be left behind. I’ve been a futurist for 45 years, and I’ve been preaching this for just as long: the singularity is upon us. In a very short time, AI’s progress will accelerate beyond anything we can currently measure—faster than light, even.

We’ll need entirely new concepts of time and space just to describe the speed at which information is doubling.


100% Me:

"Whoever reaches the singularly 1st will be forever in the lead, nobody else will be able to
ever catch up" (Michio Kaku, paraphrasing). If it's china or south korea, or Iran, you'd best
start learning their language bc even we'll never be able to catch back up. They could
exterminate the vast majority of us by simply taking control of our power grid, water
supplies, oil, farm tech and supply chains. Bam! there goes most everybody except the
preppers, politicians & Boot Lickers. 🤜 🤔 💨
 
amneziaHaze

amneziaHaze

705
143
I just asked it whats max lux cannabis can take.it tells me 60k i tell it i fought it was 80.you are correct. -_-. It hides soo much info
 
goner

goner

48
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I just asked it whats max lux cannabis can take.it tells me 60k i tell it i fought it was 80.you are correct. -_-. It hides soo much info
open ai strikes me as a really good search engine buddy. a lot of what it learns is from the internet, and a lot of that is wrong. i see two grammar mistakes above, one using a colon improperly, one using a semicolon improperly - which are very common mistakes made by humans.

ai has its value, but still needs human verification.

i think its biggest value is in parsing huge amounts of data for trends and anomalies. and putting together menus and shopping lists.
 
O

OldSchoolest

173
63
I use it all the time, and honestly it gives way better advice on a lot of stuff as far as what the science says in my opinion.

If you’re questioning light intensity, nutrition, medium, and even what strain to grow, veg times, when to harvest, cloning, root development, watering practices, setting up a drip irrigation system, monitoring and maintaining RH and temps…

Pretty much anything you’d ever want to know ha ha ha.

It hasn’t led me astray yet!
 
amneziaHaze

amneziaHaze

705
143
open ai strikes me as a really good search engine buddy. a lot of what it learns is from the internet, and a lot of that is wrong. i see two grammar mistakes above, one using a colon improperly, one using a semicolon improperly - which are very common mistakes made by humans.

ai has its value, but still needs human verification.

i think its biggest value is in parsing huge amounts of data for trends and anomalies. and putting together menus and shopping lists.
i used it once to make a recepie gave it stuff i had and it made a decent meal.only thing was i changed chicken to ground beef it didn't calculate calories it just changed the name and gave me the same one.again i asked it how can 2 completely different meats have same calories for the same weight.it tells me you are correct XD.

for me its still like a lazy google search.or asking a friend that doesnt know stuff but has to give you something soo he lies
 
LoveGrowingIt

LoveGrowingIt

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I also use it to refine my writing style. For instance, with this response, I had it remove any regional slang or dialect to make it sound more polished. How do you think it did?
I didn't think to mention it till I saw your comment, but I also use an AI editor. It does well most of the time.
 
LoveGrowingIt

LoveGrowingIt

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The Next Big Thing will be AGI, for artificial general intelligence. That means thinking and reasoning like a human being, including programming and reprogramming itself. Add robotics and there won't be much need for humans.
 

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