I know its a bit of a hot topic but I’ve always seen people (online anyways) are either a hard yes or absolutely no on using AI. There are many types of “AI” that have already been part of technology before this hype, I’m talking about LLMs specifically (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, etc…). When this bubble burst its absolutely not going anywhere. I’m wondering if there is case where you’ve personally used it and found it beneficial (not something you’ve read or seen somewhere). The ethics of essentially stealing vast amount of data for training without compensation or enshitification of products with “AI” is a whole other topic but there is absolutely no way that the use of the technology itself is not beneficial somehow. Like everything else divisive the truth is definitely somewhere in the middle. I’ve been using lumo from proton for the last three weeks and its not bad. I’ve personally found it useful in helping me troubleshoot issues, search or just use it to help with applying for jobs:

  • its very good at looking past SEO slop plaguing the internet and it just gets me the information I need. I’ve tried alternative search engine (mojeek, startpage, searXNG, DDG, Qwant, etc…) Most of them unfortunately aren’t very good or are just another way to use google or bing.
  • I was having some wifi problem on a pc i was setting up and i couldn’t figure out why. i told it exactly what was happening with my computer along with exact specs. It gave gave me some possible reasons and some steps to try and analyze my computer it was very very useful.
  • I’ve been applying for so many jobs and it so exhausting to read hundreds of description see one tiny thing in the middle that disqualifies me so I pass it my resume with links and tell it to compare what i say on my resume and what the job is looking for to see if im a fit. When i find a good job i ask rewriting tips to better focus on what will stand out to a recruiter (or an application filtering system to be real).

I guess what I’m trying to say is it cant all be bad.

  • altphoto@lemmy.today
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    57 minutes ago

    For engineering… Get me a script that calculates the length of a window based on a similar size. Or calculate the tip velocity of a turbine blade given the speed of the gas going into it and the diameter of the turbine. Basically things we would have to take a month to design so as to answer other questions. Cuz nobody pays you to make quick calculation tools.

  • melsaskca@lemmy.ca
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    8 hours ago

    I see it as a toy. No different from the Slinky or Silly Putty I had as a kid. Just something to play with.

  • darthelmet@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    I took AI courses in college and it was fun to learn about then when it was a bunch of toy examples that showed the potential of these systems, but it was clear enough to anyone in those classes or doing that research how not ready they were for real applications because of all the known flaws with how model training worked. And then some ceos just ignored all that and started blowing up the bubble.

    So my answer is the research models that could play video games kinda good. Everything after that was getting ahead of ourselves.

  • Chaser@lemmy.zip
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    8 hours ago

    I have some Hone Assistant automations, that creates some todos in Habitica for me. These todos are ai generated, so they sound like quests in a rpg 😎 this really motivates me. Also it’s funny

  • cRazi_man@europe.pub
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    9 hours ago

    I’ve used it to help me set up a home server. I can paste text from log files or ask about something not working and it tells me what the problem is. It gets things wrong a lot, but this is the perfect low risk use for AI…for sending me in the right direction when I have no idea why things aren’t working. When it’s completely wrong, it doesn’t really matter.

    The real test for AI is: “does it matter when it is completely wrong”. If the answer is yes, then that’s not a suitable use for AI.

  • comfy@lemmy.ml
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    13 hours ago

    Creating low-effort images for ideas that don’t warrant effort, like silly jokes.

  • HiddenLayer555@lemmy.ml
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    16 hours ago

    I self host Deepseek R1 and it’s been pretty helpful with simple Linux troubleshooting, generating bash commands, and even programming troubleshooting. The thinking feature is pretty cool and I do find myself learning stuff from it.

    What took it from gimmick to actual nice to have for me is when my jerry rigged home network broke and wouldn’t connect to the internet. Having what is entially an interactive StackOverflow/ServerFault running on a local machine was really helpful.

    Running the model locally makes it easier to not overly rely on AI because of the limited token rate.

  • Damaskox@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    I ask for information sometimes that I cannot find in few minutes of googling (I use a lot of this information in writing fiction). I generate images once in a while for role playing and storywriting. (Not sure if it is AI but) I turn some text over to speech, to listen at my stories.

  • deathbird@mander.xyz
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    15 hours ago

    It’s good for rapid output of plausibly human text that can then be sorted or assessed for adequate validity or utility. That’s all.

  • josephc@lemmy.ml
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    15 hours ago

    I used to spend days rotoscoping people in videos. Generative infill for background painting and automatic rotoscoping have saved probably a year of my life at this point. Image generation relies on CLIP, which needs a language model for conditioning.

  • aberrate_junior_beatnik (he/him)@midwest.social
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    1 day ago

    It’s got lots of uses:

    • driving up fossil fuel revenues
    • providing a solid excuse for laying off a bunch of employees
    • disciplining labor
    • offloading blame for unpopular decisions
    • increasing surveillance and nonconsensual data collection
  • Anna@lemmy.ml
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    18 hours ago

    I don’t use it for writing code because that’s what I love but I use it for documentation and other stuff I hate…😂