Not really (I wasnât using Google directly anyway), I think it fills a slightly different niche than search engines.
Itâs good as a fuzzy search for the sum of public knowledge, since it can understand quite complex queries and point you in the right direction, then you can go to regular search engines to find more specific stuff.
Bing was fun to exploit, but I donât really see why itâs useful, it tends to always look up information which means it provides less of its own knowledge, I can do the searches myself better than an LM. Maybe it can provide more concise answers than all the SEO crap everywhere, but that can be avoided by searching on specific websites like reddit.
Itâs about methodology more than research questions, although they are of course linked. Incorporating digital methods in your humanities project, like GIS, 3D modeling or ABM, will quickly land you in digital humanities. Remember though, humanities have a lot of theory and methodology you might be unfamiliar with as a CS student, so teaming up with someone who has those skills but lack in programming etc. will synergize in this field.
No, but recently iâve stopped using Google as well. Currently I mostly use Ecosia, I think their company philosophy is pretty cool and I like the results so far. I donât think that ChatGPT works as a substitute for a search engine for my uses at least, as many of my searches require me to check multiple links and I donât always type in the full natural language sentences necessary for ChatGPT.
Have a look at Neocities (a successor to Geocities). My website is here.
You can also have a look at the rest of the Fediverse. There are some cool accounts on Mastodon and PeerTube.
For that true âold webâ thing, have you ever heard of gemini? Take a look. My capsule on gemini is here, but you will need a gemini browser in order to see it.
Ravenlok is dope. Itâs easy, and button-mashy, but my god the visuals and music make up for all of it. It swept me away. I think it would be especially fantastic for kids, but definitely enjoyable for adults to.
Valheim is great in single-player, to my surprise.
I like Redfall. ducks But seriously, I do. I like the big open world, the over-the-top vampire thing, the feeling of finding the best way to sneak up on the enemy and take them down. The guns feel satisfying to me. I get excited every time I find a better one. Iâm curious where the story is going. Some of the set pieces and environmental storytelling moments are really cool.
I havenât encountered many bugs at all. One time some enemies appeared out of nowhere, but honestly that just fit in with the vibe of the game anyway.
The AI is dumb, but⊠Iâm finding I donât care. Theyâre numerous and still manage to kill me sometimes. Iâm ignoring it entirely the same way I ignore it in the original Deus Ex.
Itâs not a Dishonored or a Prey, but itâs not trying to be, either. Itâs great if you just want to explore an interesting map and do some sneaking and shooting and looting.
Iâm obviously the minority in this opinion, but also, itâs on gamepass, so it doesnât cost anything to try if you havenât. I almost didnât because of the reviews and Iâm very glad I gave it a chance anyway.
I think there was a phone called the Cosmo Communicator or something from a UK company that had a physical keyboard and a touchscreen that seemed cool.
They also have a newer model Astro Slide, but itâs significantly more expensive and has availability problems. Iâve had one since Christmas or so, though, and Iâm happy with it. CC is fine as well, and indeed the sale seems quite good.
(I used to have their first phone as well, but truly AS would have been a much better first device to bring to the market, there really arenât any fundamental flaws in it in my view.)
What do you think are the chances of them being around in 5 years time? I really want to get this as my next phone but for now Iâm happy with my current phone (King Kong Mini 2)
I wouldnât personally use chatGPT ,or any language model for that matter, if factual information is the goal.
DDG has been my go-to recently, but mostly because Iâm jaded with current year data harvesting and such. The internet feels like such a hassle these days .-.
@natebluehooves@dl007, to find what I search I use mostly these search engines with AI without BigBrother company spyware, is in these where AI is usefull because "de-hazzle" the internet with direct answers based on reliable resources, ChatGPT can't do this, it has a knowledge base from 2021 and can't give reliable and up-to-date answers because of this.
None of the search engines is perfect, all of them have pros and flaws, because of this, if you need a deeper research it is inevitable to have several on hand.
âThe contentâ on all Lemmy instances is the same. There is no account migration, but you can just sign up on lemmy.ml. If you already had an account there and you want it back⊠I donât know if itâs possible for an admin there to restore it, you might have to get in touch with them.
This is really the core element people seem to be worried about. You build a community, you post a heap of content, you have charge of moderation and then suddenly your chosen instance dies, or you get banned.
I think there will eventually be a fix, but encourage everyone to remember that this, the biggest weakness of the platform is also its greatest strength. Personally I have created my communities on a different instance than the one I post on daily. Itâs a larger instance and the only thing on that account are post submissions - I use lemmy.dbzer0 to browse and comment daily because I like its interface and local community the best.
It annoyed me at first, but Iâve learned to see the value in having separate yet interlinked spaces. I have also duplicated that community and some content on another instance. It has zero traffic, but I donât trust anyone or anything these days.
Anyone else using Kagi.com for search? Iâm using it as a paid user and itâs fantastic, no ads and no tracking and results are great. I use ChatGPT for âideasâ and Kagi for specifics.
Itâs really weird. Thereâs so few people here, but the conversations are really good. Everyone is friendly and the place is growing. Thatâs a really great vibe.
Sadly i checked in on the Apollo sub and thereâs a lot of hate on there for Lemmy. Not sure if people fully understand it or they are just fighting the inevitable change that is coming lol. But it def. reminds me of the digg meltdown and how people were hellbent that reddit sucked and wouldnât last and was too difficult to use⊠lol change is hard sometimes but itâs life.
The complaints are all over the place so likely coming from people that either A.) havenât actually used Lemmy. B.) Used it for .5 seconds got confused and gave up. C.) Are just afraid of change and just wanna stick their heads in the sandâŠ
But most of them center around how difficult lemmy is to use and how âcommunities are way too overbearing with the rules.â , that it uses the new.reddit UI, and that itâs run by a bunch of âtankiesâ
Whatâs a tankie? My biggest concern is the fragmentation of communities due to multiple servers, so the numbers in any one server will always be smaller.
theyâre complaining about us lemmygrad users, but we arenât even the biggest instance anymore + the 2 recommended instances block us anyways so itâs a worthless complaint now
I have noticed that the quality of results on Google and DDG and others have been declining steadily over the last few years, and I think this is mostly a result of click farms generally getting better at gaming the system. Genuinely quality content is just being drowned out by crap.
ChatGPT doesnât really address this. I also donât see ChatGPT as a genuine replacement yet because 1) hallucination is still too big of a problem and 2) the value add of using natural language for queries doesnât seem all that beneficial to me. Sorta like, how IF you are already used to a terminal, it will be faster or just as fast as a GUI for many things.
The only real value I have seen from ChatGPT, is for complex boilerplate generation that is very easy to verify. ChatGPT is fantastic for generating regex, for example. Or poems, if you prefer.
Iâve used ChatGPT for things like generating c linker scripts or writing a bochs configuration file. It would have taken me 30 minutes to research how to make a bochs config file but since I got ChatGPT to shit out something wrong but close to correct, I only had to fill in the incorrect stuff based on common sense and google a few things.
Natural language kind of stuff can be helpful if you donât know the relvent terms for something though I havenât had too much luck most of the time with ChatGPT on that kind of stuff. Worse is that ChatGPT is likely to lead to even more SEO spam :(
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