The problem is that the "big tech" corporations demand that everyone blindly believes everything the LLMs say. I say that they're being used incorrectly, that incorrect application is forced on us against our will, and they're not quite ready for public consumption when used properly.
Stuff like the AI synopsis and asking AI to write something for you always looks hastily typed without much thought (that was called a "keyboard composition" when I was in high school - people thought that handwriting made you think more about what you were writing, resulting in a better first draft), but with a bunch of marketing buzzwords thrown in that no human would put in their summary.
What's really strange is that people seem to have a good experience with some LLMs in moderation unless I'm in the room. Then it hallucinates, and people who I trust (not corporate shills) say that it shouldn't have done that. The place where I work started reluctantly allowing Copilot (mainly because Microsoft forced it on everyone, even in enterprise versions of Windows with full IT management features) after years of saying that all AI was banned (they didn't want to repeat what happened to Samsung). One coworker was impressed with its ability to make Python code, but another was severely disappointed in its ability to write (she said that she was compensating for being a non-native English speaker, but she writes better without AI than most Americans).
weedeewee wrote on Yesterday, 13:55:
google search is getting worse each day. Now I'm trying to find a makita part and it doesn't even find the spare part while duckduckgo shows it immediatly.
Maybe I should ask gemini... NO.
For me, Google has no problem listing hundreds of sellers for a specific part, but absolutely refuses to give me a website that contains any form of documentation.