I’ve seen a lot of sentiment around Lemmy that AI is “useless”. I think this tends to stem from the fact that AI has not delivered on, well, anything the capitalists that push it have promised it would. That is to say, it has failed to meaningfully replace workers with a less expensive solution - AI that actually attempts to replace people’s jobs are incredibly expensive (and environmentally irresponsible) and they simply lie and say it’s not. It’s subsidized by that sweet sweet VC capital so they can keep the lie up. And I say attempt because AI is truly horrible at actually replacing people. It’s going to make mistakes and while everybody’s been trying real hard to make it less wrong, it’s just never gonna be “smart” enough to not have a human reviewing its’ behavior. Then you’ve got AI being shoehorned into every little thing that really, REALLY doesn’t need it. I’d say that AI is useless.

But AIs have been very useful to me. For one thing, they’re much better at googling than I am. They save me time by summarizing articles to just give me the broad strokes, and I can decide whether I want to go into the details from there. They’re also good idea generators - I’ve used them in creative writing just to explore things like “how might this story go?” or “what are interesting ways to describe this?”. I never really use what comes out of them verbatim - whether image or text - but it’s a good way to explore and seeing things expressed in ways you never would’ve thought of (and also the juxtaposition of seeing it next to very obvious expressions) tends to push your mind into new directions.

Lastly, I don’t know if it’s just because there’s an abundance of Japanese language learning content online, but GPT 4o has been incredibly useful in learning Japanese. I can ask it things like “how would a native speaker express X?” And it would give me some good answers that even my Japanese teacher agreed with. It can also give some incredibly accurate breakdowns of grammar. I’ve tried with less popular languages like Filipino and it just isn’t the same, but as far as Japanese goes it’s like having a tutor on standby 24/7. In fact, that’s exactly how I’ve been using it - I have it grade my own translations and give feedback on what could’ve been said more naturally.

All this to say, AI when used as a tool, rather than a dystopic stand-in for a human, can be a very useful one. So, what are some use cases you guys have where AI actually is pretty useful?

  • Aeri@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    I think it’s useful for spurring my own creativity in writing because I have a hard time getting started. To be fair to me I pretty much tear the whole thing down and start over but it gives me ideas.

  • amelia@feddit.org
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    5 days ago

    I use it for little Python projects where it’s really really useful.

    I’ve used it for linux problems where it gave me the solution to problems that I had not been able to solve with a Google search alone.

    I use it as a kickstarter for writing texts by telling it roughly what my text needs to be, then tweaking the result it gives me. Sometimes I just use the first sentence but it’s enough to give me a starting point to make life easer.

    I use it when I need to understand texts about a topic I’m not familiar with. It can usually give me an idea of what the terminology means and how things are connected which helps a lot for further research on the topic and ultimately undestanding the text.

    I use it for everyday problems like when I needed a new tube for my bike but wasn’t sure what size it was so I told it what was written on the tyre and showed it a picture of the tube packaging while I was in the shop and asked it if it was the right one. It could tell my that it is the correct one and why. The explanation was easy to fact-check.

    I use Photoshop AI a lot to remove unwanted parts in photos I took or to expand photos where I’m not happy with the crop.

    Honestly, I absolutely love the new AI tools and I think people here are way too negative about it in general.

  • Agent641@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    I used it to write a GUI frontend for yt-dlp in python so I can rip MP3s from YouTube videos in two clicks to listen to them on my phone while I’m running with no signal, instead of hand-crafting and running yt-dlp commands in CMD.

    Also does HD video rips with audio encoding, if I want.

    It took us about a day to make a fully polished product over 9 iterative versions.

    It would have taken me a couple weeks to write it myself (and therefore I would not have done so, as I am supremely lazy)

  • fine_sandy_bottom@lemmy.federate.cc
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    5 days ago

    This thread has convinced me that LLMs are merely a mild increment in productivity.

    The most compelling is that they’re good at boilerplate code. IDEs have been improving on that since forever. Although there’s a lot of claims in this thread that seem unlikely - gains way beyond even what marketing is claiming.

    I work in an email / spreadsheet / report type job. We’ve always been agile with emerging techs, but LLMs just haven’t made a dent.

    This might seem offensive, but clients don’t pay me to write emails that LLMs could, because anything an LLM could write could be found in a web search. The emails I write are specific to a client’s circumstances. There are very few “biolerplate” sentences.

    Yes LLMs can be good at updating reports, but we have highly specialised software for generating reports from very carefully considered templates.

    I’ve heard they can be helpful in a “convert this to csv” kind of way, but that’s just not a problem I ever encounter. Maybe I’m just used to using spreadsheets to manipulate data so never think to use an LLM.

    I’ve seen low level employees try to use LLMs to help with their emails. It’s usually obvious because the emails they write include a lot of extra sentences and often don’t directly address the query.

    I don’t intend this to be offensive, and I suspect that my attitude really just identifies me as a grumpy old man, but I can’t really shake the feeling that in email / spreadsheet / report type jobs anyone who can make use of an LLM wasn’t or isn’t producing much value anyway. This thread has really reinforced that attitude.

    It reminds me a lot of block chain tech. 10 years ago it was going to revolutionise data everything. Now there’s some niche use cases… “it could be great at recording vehicle transfers if only centralised records had some disadvantages”.

  • ahal@lemmy.ca
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    6 days ago

    I take pictures of my recipe books and ask ChatGPT to scan and convert them to the schema.org recipe format so I can import them into my Nextcloud cookbook.

      • ahal@lemmy.ca
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        6 days ago

        I don’t do anything too sophisticated, just something like:

        Scan this image of a recipe and format it as JSON that conforms to the schema defined at https://schema.org/Recipe.

        Sometimes it puts placeholders in that aren’t valid JSON, so I don’t have it fully automated… But it’s good enough for my needs.

        I’ve thought that the various Nextcloud cookbook apps should do this for sites that don’t have the recipe object… But I don’t feel motivated to implement this myself.

  • mm_maybe@sh.itjust.works
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    6 days ago

    r/SubSimGPT2Interactive for the lulz is my #1 use case

    i do occasionally ask Copilot programming questions and it gives reasonable answers most of the time.

    I use code autocomplete tools in VSCode but often end up turning them off.

    Controversial, but Replika actually helped me out during the pandemic when I was in a rough spot. I trained a copyright-safe (theft-free) bot on my own conversations from back then and have been chatting with the me side of that conversation for a little while now. It’s like getting to know a long-lost twin brother, which is nice.

    Otherwise, i’ve used small LLMs and classifiers for a wide range of tasks, like sentiment analysis, toxic content detection for moderation bots, AI media detection, summarization… I like using these better than just throwing everything at a huge model like GPT-4o because they’re more focused and less computationally costly (hence also better for the environment). I’m working on training some small copyright-safe base models to do certain sequence prediction tasks that come up in the course of my data science work, but they’re still a bit too computationally expensive for my clients.

  • DerArzt@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    I run some TTRPG groups and having AI take in some context and generate the first draft of flavor text for custom encounters is nice. Also for generating background art and player character portraits is an easy win for me.

    • vithigar@lemmy.ca
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      6 days ago

      This is my current best use for it as well. Having a unique portrait for every named NPC helps them stand out quite a bit better and the players respond much more strongly to all of them.

  • olsonexi@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    When troubleshooting, it’s nice to be able to ask copilot about the issue in human language and have it actually understand my question (unlike a search engine) and pull from and reference relevant documentation in its answers. Going back and forth with it has saved me several hours of searching for something that I had never even heard of a couple of times.

    It’s also great for rewriting things in a specific tone. I can give it a bland/terse/matter-of-fact paragraph and get back a more fun or professional or friendly version that would feel ridiculously cringe if I attempted to write it myself, but the AI makes it work somehow.

  • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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    6 days ago

    I use it for generating illustrations and NPCs for my TTRPG campaign, at which it excels. I’m not going to pay out the nose for an image that will be referenced for an hour or two.

    I also use it for first drafts (resume, emails, stuff like that) as well as brainstorming and basic Google tier questions. Great jumping off point.

    An iterative approach works best for me, refining results until they match what I’m looking for, then manually refining further until I’m happy with the results.

  • cuuube@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago
    • to correct/rephrase a sentence or two if my sentence sounds too awkward

    • if I’m having trouble making an excel formula

  • Foreigner@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I use it like an intern/other team member since the non-profit I work for doesn’t have any money to hire more people. Things like:

    • Taking transcripts of meetings and turning them into neat and ordered meeting minutes/summaries, or pulling out any key actions/next steps
    • Putting together objectives and agendas for meetings based on some loose info and ideas I give it
    • Summarise the key points from articles/long documents I don’t have tome or patience to read through fully.
    • Making my emails sound more professional/nicer/make up for my brainfarts
    • Giving me ideas on how to format/word slides and documents depending on what tone I want to employ - is it meant for leadership? Other team members?
    • Make my writing more organised/better structured/more professional sounding
    • Writing emails in foreign languages with a professional tone. Caveat is I’m fluent enough in those languages to know if the output sounds right. Before AI I would rely on google translate (meh), dictionaries, language forums, etc and it would take me HOURS to write a simple email using the correct terminology. Also helpful to check grammar and sentence structure in ways that aren’t always picked up by Word.
    • I sound more like a robot than an actual robot, so I ask the robot to reword my emails/messages to sound more “human” when the need arises (like a colleague is leaving, had a baby, etc).
    • Bouncing off ideas. This doesn’t always work and I know it doesn’t actually have an opinion, but it helps get the ball rolling, especially if I’m struggling with procrastination.
    • If my sentences are too long for a document, I ask it to shorten/reword and it’s pretty capable of doing that without losing too much of the essence of what I want to get across

    Of course I don’t just take whatever it spits out and paste it. I read through everything, make sure it still sounds more or less like “me”. Sometimes it’ll take a couple of prompts to get it to go where I want it, and takes a bit of review and editing but it saves me literal hours. It’s not necessarily perfect, but it does the job. I get it’s not a panacea, and it’s not great for the environment, but this tech is literally saving my sanity right now.

    • fine_sandy_bottom@lemmy.federate.cc
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      6 days ago

      I couldn’t let an AI do any of this for me.

      As in… I couldn’t let anyone make my emails more professional or whatever.

      It’s not like I think my emails are always the best and can not be improved upon, it’s just that my emails are “me”.

      I never have cause to write an email in a foreign language.

  • AWildMimicAppears@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 days ago

    I switched to Linux a few weeks ago and i’m running a local LLM (which was stupidly easy to do compared to windows) which i ask for tips with regex, bash scripts, common tools to get my system running as i prefer, and translations/definitions. i don’t copy/paste code, but let it explain stuff step by step, consult the man pages for the recommended tools, and then write my own stuff.

    i will extend this to coding in the future; i do have a bit of coding experience, but it’s mainly Pascal, which is horrendly outdated. At least i already have enough basic knowledge to know when the internal logic of what the LLM is spitting out is wrong.

        • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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          6 days ago

          Llama 2 is really ancient now.

          Try Qwen 2.5, whatever size fits on your system (probably 14B?). Its like night and day compared to llama2, and 34B/72B are like API model smart.

            • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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              6 days ago

              I can link you to a good quantization, depending on your hardware!

              And if you need long context (Qwen 2.5 is 32K, or potentially more), I can also point to the appropriate framework/settings.

  • barsoap@lemm.ee
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    6 days ago

    Spaced repetition, in particular Anki with FSRS. I don’t think they advertise it as “AI” or even “ML” anywhere, but let’s just say gradient descent over gigantic datasets is involved, all to predict the time when you’re about to forget something so that Anki can prompt you just before that happens. The default predictor is generic, derived from that gigantic dataset, it’s like two handful of tuning parameters, once you’ve gone through enough cards yourself it can be tuned to your mind and habits, in particular, how you use the “hard, good, easy” buttons.

    It’s the perfect sledge hammer for the application for the simple reason that we don’t actually understand how memory works so telling the computer “here’s data from millions of med students and language learners, figure out how to predict it” is our best shot. And, indeed, it’s the best-performing algorithm even before you tune it at which point it becomes eerie.


    Relatedly, as in “no LLM, no diffusion” Proxima Fusion is using machine learning to crunch through the design space of stellerators to figure out what to prototype in the real world. Actual engineers doing actual engineering.


    Then, lastly, yes, playing around with SDXL is fun. Just make sure you can actually judge the images, developing an artistic eye by hitting generate I think is close to impossible. Definitely slower than picking up a pencil, or firing up blender and actually learning how to draw or sculpt.

  • MehBlah@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    AI is a half cooked baked potato right now. Sure it will keep you fed if you can put up with all the hard lumps in there.