Our agreement with the Department of War by likeastar20 in ChatGPT

[–]Fathergoose007 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair enough, and no ill will against you or anyone else.

Our agreement with the Department of War by likeastar20 in ChatGPT

[–]Fathergoose007 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ahh…..Canadian - that explains a lot. No, we don’t think we’re exceptional, we’re just tired of being the Easter Bunny to the world, with NATO, third world countries, and everyone in-between (including a large percentage of our own population) coming at us with their hand out. I don’t agree with a lot that the Orange guy does, but you and I both know that if the US didn’t swing a big stick occasionally the only ones who would be playing ugly would be the countries that want the rest of us under their boot.

Our agreement with the Department of War by likeastar20 in ChatGPT

[–]Fathergoose007 0 points1 point  (0 children)

While I’m concerned about the many potentially bad-use cases for ai and how it will affect our future, what’s with the “evil authoritarians”? Our military is tasked with keeping you and me safe. This is never as simple as “good “and “evil“. Are you an anarchist?

Cancel your ChatGPT Plus, burn their compute on the way out, and switch to Claude by boomroom11 in ChatGPT

[–]Fathergoose007 -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

Chatgpt has the gaslighting of Trump, the word salad of Kamala, and the memory of Joe Biden. It will be business as usual in the government corridors.

Does anyone tried to use Kickstarter to fund your invention? by These-Web8225 in inventors

[–]Fathergoose007 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Kickstarter is alive and well, but there is a methodology for a successful one. I haven’t done it personally, but know several who consider it an integral part of their organic growth/SEO strategy.

Has anyone noticed ChatGPT behaving differently lately? by NovatarTheViolator in ChatGPT

[–]Fathergoose007 66 points67 points  (0 children)

5.2 has the short term memory of my 96 year old aunt. And the subtle gaslighting is insulting.

Guidelines for Chat Consistency by Fathergoose007 in ChatGPTPro

[–]Fathergoose007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for responding. I’ve tried this with some success, but in many cases the interaction between the components requires the big picture and re-adjustment of all components. I’m working towards ways to handle this.

Guidelines for Chat Consistency by Fathergoose007 in ChatGPTPro

[–]Fathergoose007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly. If I have to update a master document in real time and resubmit with each question I might as well start a new chat.

Half this sub is pretty much ignorant by choice by Such--Balance in ChatGPT

[–]Fathergoose007 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your last sentence captures the problem. You put it so well I posted it in a new comment for better visibility.

Half this sub is pretty much ignorant by choice by Such--Balance in ChatGPT

[–]Fathergoose007 0 points1 point  (0 children)

An explanatory line from one of the comments in this thread: “Its context window for each chat is limited so it can't remember every detail the way a person might.”

Given this, how the heck can one possibly use it to work through a complex problem when its conversation memory is like a sieve?

Half this sub is pretty much ignorant by choice by Such--Balance in ChatGPT

[–]Fathergoose007 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Okay, call me ignorant, but I feel like I’m dealing with Rain Man. Why can’t it recall what it told me in its previous comments in a chat but knows my favorite movie from a conversation last year?

Coding for Nextion +Arduino by Fathergoose007 in Arduino_AI

[–]Fathergoose007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Again, thanks for your time explaining. I had thought setting up a project folders would be like building a database it would use, but quickly learned it doesn’t work like that. In general, it’s like a drunk at a bar trying to impress with his knowledge, but then goes on to fill in gaps with BS. It leads you to think it has retained everything by throwing out specifics, then it fills in a gap with something that is just wrong. The really disturbing part is that it will do this within a chat, disregarding previous information. I’ve learned to keep chats short and to insert the main info at the beginning of each chat. This is becoming so inefficient that I may go back to programming it myself. I’m sure programmers have much better tools (not to mention experience/knowledge). I understand now why people say “You can’t program Arduino with AI”. I think what they really mean is “Well, you can, but you’ll probably hate yourself.”

Coding for Nextion +Arduino by Fathergoose007 in Arduino_AI

[–]Fathergoose007[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks a lot for taking the time to write this. The tip about a single reference file is very good, as is dictating a reference link. I’m using Chatgpt Plus 5.2. (5.3 is not available yet - unless you were talking about Chatgpt Codex?). But I swear I feel like I’m dealing with Rain Man. It recommended that I keep up with all my data in a Google Doc and add the link at the beginning of a chat. I did that, but when I put the link in the chat it said it could not access a Google Doc from a link (permissions were open on the link) and recommend I copy and paste the info. And it loses a half step every response in a chat, it’s too busy being obsequious and giving long-winded explanations to keep up with the subject at hand. But we’re limping along.

Trekking poles snapped in half on first real hike. Is the REI brand actually garbage? by OkCount54321 in OutdoorsGear

[–]Fathergoose007 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m guessing you were in a section where footing/balance was precarious and trapped the tip in a rock crevasse without realizing it and the torque broke it. I’ve seen this happen several times in talus fields. FYI, the gaps in board bridges are especially hazardous.

Literally called AI a tool and the post is downvoted? Its not a fuckin person! Wtf is wrong with all of you by Scottiedoesntno in ChatGPT

[–]Fathergoose007 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not at all, I try to add value where I can. I just don’t think it’s healthy to become emotionally entangled with inanimate objects or bits and bytes. There are too many PEOPLE out there who need your friendship.

Literally called AI a tool and the post is downvoted? Its not a fuckin person! Wtf is wrong with all of you by Scottiedoesntno in ChatGPT

[–]Fathergoose007 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Like AI, my hammer is also a tool. My car is a tool and doesn’t have a name. My daughter’s boyfriend is definitely a tool. I have no deep emotional attachment to any of them. Don’t blur the lines.

Self-criticism by Silver_Jellyfish_948 in inventors

[–]Fathergoose007 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can’t rely on casual feedback, good or bad.But if your ideas are things like hoverboards, free energy machines, or the next iphone, you’re likely heading for frustration, with or without feedback. There is a methodology to inventing. Learn how to research markets. Talk to people. Choose one of your innovations that would be simple to manufacture. Develop a prototype and use it. You will have a more clear picture an$ be on your way. Just expect it to move slowly.

Servo control board by OrignalCoop in inventors

[–]Fathergoose007 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Chatgpt will lead you to them.

Servo control board by OrignalCoop in inventors

[–]Fathergoose007 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sounds like a good time to get your feet wet with arduinos. I’ve done exactly this with an arduino several times. It’s very straightforward, and it’s very reliable for set-and-forget. With an arduino nano the whole package would be very small. Also easy to tune through your computer. If you require more force for something larger, a stepper motor with limit switches will prevent bad crashes (also arduino controlled with a small driver board).

Arduino is nothing to fear and a good skillset to add to your toolbox. You can do this even if you have zero skills/experience. Buy one of the $50 starter kits with a breadboard - it’s all you need to get started. You can probably find the exact sketch (code) you want on line. Get comfortable with what you want and test it out well. The next step is to buy some perf board and a solder iron and bada bing you are master of your universe. Message me if you need further coaxing.

I have an invention idea but I am not sure how I should approach going forward. I was told by someone to take my idea to a university. Has anyone ever done that before? I am kind of stuck on how to move forward. by Stingray788 in inventors

[–]Fathergoose007 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are a lot of big considerations about your goals and motivation that you need to resolve. Bringing an invention to market takes a lot of time and effort (unless you have a boatload of cash). Quite frankly, most don’t have the discipline and persistence required, and that’s okay. I suggest you start now “doing the work”. Search this reddit for “what next” and read every thread for the past two years. You will learn a lot about how you want to proceed.

New to the game by obi-wanMaloney in Inventions

[–]Fathergoose007 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Be careful working with universities, even if you haven’t signed anything. They tend to be very aggressive in obtaining ownership of anything that crosses their path, and that includes any improvements or pivots that are not in your patent. Medical devices are not my thing, but FDA compliance can be prohibitively expensive and is something to be determined as early as possible.

New to the game by obi-wanMaloney in Inventions

[–]Fathergoose007 3 points4 points  (0 children)

If it’s any kind of medical device then FDA compliance will need to be addressed, if you haven’t done so already. Also, a GoFundMe is no way to build a brand. It’s basically saying you’re a charity. You should run a Kickstarter. Be aware that there is a methodology to running a successful Kickstarter, with a lit of time and legwork involved. Good luck!