When I search this topic online, I always find either wrong information or advertising lies. So what is actually something that LLMs can do very well, as in being actually useful and not just outputing a nonsensical word salad that sounds coherent.

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So basically from what I’ve read, most people use it for natural language processing problems.

Example: turn this infodump into a bullet point list, or turn this bullet point list into a coherent text, help me with rephrasing this text, word association, etc.

Other people use it for simple questions that it can answer with a database of verified sources.

Also, a few people use it as struggle duck, basically helping alleviate writers block.

Thanks guys.

  • Xavienth@lemmygrad.ml
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    4 hours ago

    Taking a natural language question and providing a foothold on a subject by giving you the vocabulary so that you can research a topic on your own.

    “What is it called when xyz.”

  • Zacryon@lemmy.wtf
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    5 hours ago

    Brainstorming. ChatGPT and co. are slightly better rubber ducks. Which helps to sort my thoughts and evaluate ideas.

    Also when researching a new topic I barely know anything about, it helps to get useful pointers and keywords for further research and reading. It’s like an interactive Wikipedia in that regard.

  • Cysioland@lemmygrad.ml
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    4 hours ago

    Very basic and non-creative source code operations. Eg. “convert this representation of data to that representation of data based on the template”

  • demunted@lemmy.ml
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    18 hours ago

    Just rewrote my corporate IT policies. I feed it all the old policies and a huge essay of criteria, styles, business goals etc. then created a bunch of new policies. I have chatgpt interview me about the new policies, I don’t trust what it outputs until I review it in detail and I ask it things like

    What do other similar themed policies have that I don’t? How is the policy going to be hard to enforce? What are my obligations annually, quarterly and so on?

    What forms should I have in place to capture information ( i.e. consultant onboarding).

    I can do it all myself but it would be slower and more likely to have consistency and grammatical errors.

  • TriflingToad@sh.itjust.works
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    18 hours ago

    I use it pretty sparsely, and it’s stuff that’s simple but if I were to google I’d get a whole 10 page essay about filled with ads.

    For example here’s some of my recent searches, the span is like ~2 months back.

    • XXL and 2X being the same thing.
    • Rainbow Minecraft MOTD server text.
    • Script to find all the schematic files in my ~30 nested files and copy them to a new folder
    • how to get cat hair out of clothes
    • some legal supreme court thing from the 1800s
    • creative commons CC-BY-SA explanation (their website didn’t explain what the abbreviation of “BY” was)
    • how to unlock my grandad’s truck with the code
    • “can ghosts be black” (??? I think I was in a silly argument on discord)
    • how to read blood pressure
    • scene from movie where I forgot the movie
    • how to draw among us in desmos calculator as a joke
  • whaleross@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    A fringe case I’ve found ChatGPT very useful is to learn more about information that is plentiful but buried in dead threads in various old school web forums and thus very hard to Google. Like other people’s experiences from homebrewing. Then I ask it for sources and most often it is accurate to the claims of other homebrewers that also can be correct or less correct.

  • sevan@lemmy.ca
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    21 hours ago

    I use it to help me come up with better wording for things. A few examples:

    • Writing annual goals for my team. I had an outline of what I wanted my goals to be, but wanted to get well written detail about what it looks like to meet or exceed expectations on each goal and to create some variations based on a couple of different job types.

    • Brainstorming interview questions. I can use the job description and other information to come up with a starting list of questions and then challenge the LLM to describe how the question is useful. I rarely use the results as-is, but it helps me to think through my interview plan better than just using a list of generic questions.

    • Converting a stream of thought bullet list into a well written communication.

  • BmeBenji@lemm.ee
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    21 hours ago

    I ask it increasingly absurd riddles and laugh when it hallucinates and tells me something even more absurd.

  • Sarmyth@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    I have it make me excel formulas that I know are possible, but I can’t remember the names or makeup for. Afterwords I always ask “what’s a better way to display this data?” And I sometimes get a good response. Because of data security reasons I dont give it any real data but we have an internal one I can use for such things and I sometimes throw spreadsheets in for random queries that I can make in plain language.

  • absGeekNZ@lemmy.nz
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    24 hours ago

    Philosophy.

    Ask it to act as Socrates, pick a topic and it will help you with introspection.

    This is good for examining your biases.

    e.g. I want to examine the role of government employees.
    e.g. when is it ok to give up on an idea?

  • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
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    19 hours ago

    I find they’re pretty good at some coding tasks. For example, it’s very easy to make a reasonable UI given a sample JSON payload you might get from an endpoint. They’re good at doing stuff like crafting farily complex SQL queries or making shell scripts. As long as the task is reasonably focused, they tend to get it right a lot of the time. I find they’re also useful for discovering language features working with languages I’m not as familiar with. I also find LLMs are great at translation and transcribing images. They’re also useful for summaries and finding information within documents, including codebases. I’ve found it makes it a lot easier to search through papers where you might want to find relationships between concepts or definitions for things. They’re also good at subtitle generation and well as doing text to speech tasks. Another task I find they’re great at is proofreading and providing suggestions for phrasing. They can also make a good sounding board. If there’s a topic you understand, and you just want to bounce ideas off, it’s great to be able to talk through that with a LLM. Often the output it produces can stimulate a new idea in my head. I also use LLM as a tutor when I practice Chinese, they’re great for doing free form conversational practice when learning a new language. These are a just a few areas I use LLMs in on nearly daily basis now.

    • uberstar@lemmy.ml
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      12 hours ago

      I use LLMs to generate unit tests, among other things that are pretty much already described here. It helps me discover edge cases I haven’t considered before, regardless if the generated unit tests themselves pass correctly or not.

  • Jorn@lemm.ee
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    22 hours ago

    I use it for helping me learn German but only for explaining things like grammatical rules, concepts, or word uses.

    Do not ask it to translate or write something for you. It will make lots of grammatical mistakes. I find that it often misgenders or uses the wrong case for nouns in a sentence.

  • dosse91@lemmy.trippy.pizza
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    1 day ago

    As a developer, I use LLMs as sort of a search engine, I ask things like how to use a certain function, or how to fix a build error. I try to avoid asking for code because often the generated code doesn’t work or uses made up or deprecated functions.

    As a teacher, I use it to generate data for exercises, they’re especially useful for populating databases and generating text files in a certain format that need to be parsed. I tried asking for ideas for new exercises but they always suck.