this post was submitted on 13 Jun 2024
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Ok. Tell me how A.I made your life better so far
Using "AI" has been beneficial for example to generate image descriptions automatically, which were then used as alternative text on a website. This increased accessibility AND users were able to use full text search on these descriptions to find images faster. Same goes for stuff like classification of images, video and audio. I know of some applications in agriculture where object detection and classification etc. is used to optimize the usage of fertilizer and pesticides reducing costs and reducing environmental impact they cause. There are ofcourse many more examples like these but the point should be clear.
I work in a medical startup and we provide an AI powered service for semi automatic target detection for neurosurgery specifically for Parkinson's and essential tremor. Many patients have benefitted from it so far with excellent results and the fact that it allows surgeons to perform the entire surgery under general anesthesia makes it much less traumatic and available to many more patients.
It's okay to reconcile that AI is both an amazing tool with a lot of great benefits in some areas AND a lot of assholish data theft and overhyped, unhelpful bloat shoved down our throats in others.
I can ask a lot of specific coding questions without having to try to generalize them to get some results in a search engine.
I generated a few logo sketches to show the logo designer what I liked and disliked, which parts to avoid and which elements I liked.
I had a fun time (and still do from time to time) with generating images.
I learned a new skill and I very much like crafting prompts, it really makes you think from a very alien point of view when you're after something obscure.
I got to work with interesting technologies when we integrated AI into our product (both generative AI and standard ML).
How has AI made your life worse so far?
My top uses are "generate this boiler plate" (for example a schema) and debugging: "why is this function returning when I expect " for example. Debugging is most certainly my favorite part of it because every developer knows the frustration of spending hours on a bug. I still try to tackle it myself initially because I believe it makes me a better problem solver but after enough time I will use Ai to explain it and learn from the experience by reading ChatGPT's thorough explanations behind what caused the bug.