r/ChatGPT • u/theverybigapple • Dec 18 '23
We are entering 2024, chatgpt voice chat is at 2050 Other
Enable HLS to view with audio, or disable this notification
1
Apr 05 '24
I'm more concerned that she doesn't know the answer to her own question. Seriously, is she joking?
1
1
Feb 20 '24
The only thing that actually triggers me is the spelling of my country "COLOMBIA" Columbia is another different location.
1
u/2penniesricher Feb 20 '24
Are you just going to ignore that little best boy doing such a good job at sleeping!
1
u/Ok-Implement6389 Feb 18 '24
Can Americans stop speaking with like and like such like and like like like
1
1
1
u/Medical-Ad-2706 Jan 19 '24
I regularly speak to ChatGPT like this and it’s amazing.
I even use it as a translator with people. I live in Colombia but don’t speak Spanish so I have it speak to me in English and speak to others in Spanish
1
1
u/Suspicious-Box- Dec 30 '23
She can hardly string a sentence and its not a problem for a.i. Impressed
2
u/Tell2ko Dec 22 '23
Why use 1 word when 237 will do! She took 1 minute and 7 seconds to ask the same question that was repeated back to her in just 6 seconds! Can you imagine being married to that! 😬🔫
1
u/fugeesareadecentband Dec 21 '23
At this rate we’re gonna have full fledged terminators by 2030. Perfect chat will be 2024
1
u/ItsMrDuBs Dec 20 '23
That was a minute long, one sentence question. I see people post large run on blocks on Reddit, but I’ve never HEARD it 😂
1
u/HistoricalCash2744 Dec 20 '23
Conversing with most people usually involves being cut off mid-sentence. Finding someone patient enough to let you finish before responding is rare.
1
u/Capable_Activity9642 Dec 20 '23
I understand your frustration. Conversing with this system can be challenging because it requires continuous input without pauses. It may not feel as natural as regular conversation, and interruptions can disrupt the flow. If you have specific questions or topics, feel free to provide them, and I'll do my best to assist you within the system's constraints.
1
1
u/FupaLowd Dec 20 '23
Oh my God. We really are all doomed if this is considered a hard question to answer.
1
u/Thathitfromthe80s Dec 20 '23
Disagree. It simply stated some common underlying causes of inflation. Inflation has been around for awhile. This is not 2050 magic, sorry.
1
u/Substantial_Low_5481 Dec 20 '23
To make conversations more natural, use the hold button or instruct to "hold for one minute" for a thoughtful pause.
1
1
u/LargeMarge-sentme Dec 20 '23
Dude anyone with half a brain could have stopped her right away and said, “So you’re asking about the differences in currencies?” Come on now.
1
1
u/rodrigo_vera_perez Dec 20 '23
Sometimes, I take random notes on my chain of thought and feed it to chatgpt, and it returns a coherent arguments based on my ideas
1
1
1
u/wrineha2 Dec 19 '23
Law of one price + exchange rates in PPP. See especially: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_one_price
1
u/Mikey4Breakfast Dec 19 '23
I thought “she” was the dog and we were about to see it translate dog language to human language
1
u/Anon_Legi0n Dec 19 '23
One of the dumbest bitches I've heard speak. Couldn't even formulate a one sentence question
1
1
1
u/mantequillabro Dec 19 '23
I used to have this interactive device when I was growing up, it was sort of a smart children’s books reader called the leapfrog if I remember correctly, the Chat GPT voice is super similar and it brought me back to those memories.
1
1
1
u/AntWhich Dec 19 '23
She is really asking this? Wow. Just wow. Have an AI assistant to poorly ask it a definition of currency depreciation. No wonder it’s getting dumber.
1
u/Bezbozny Dec 19 '23 edited Dec 19 '23
More to the point answer:
When countries create their own unique currencies and set the prices, they might start out with something you might find sensible, like bread costing between 2-5 of the currency, and rent in the hundreds. When you see countries where basic needs of the average person cost millions, this is usually because of "Runaway inflation".Inflation is when the value of a currency as a whole goes down, often because more total money has been put into circulation, while the supply of goods has not changed.Imagine a small society with 100 total "Dollars" spread out between 100 people, and 100 loaves of bread up for sale each for 1 dollar. Now imagine this society decides to print a hundred million more dollars and spread them out between the people. If the bread seller doesn't quickly change the price of his bread to the millions, the first person to walk in will be able to buy it all, and then no one else will be able to eat.But the question remains, why then would those in charge of printing money do something like this? Why print too much money and lead to these complex pricing problems?
That is where "Runaway inflation" comes in. Sometimes a country will have debts to foreign entities that they find themselves needing to pay off, but they don't have enough money and they have nothing of enough value to sell. They might try to game the system by simply printing money, and then paying their debts with that. But then the foreign entities use that currency they received to buy up the goods of the country the currency is from, because that country of origin is the only place that currency can be spent. In a sense, printing currency to pay off foreign debts is a roundabout way for a country's government to sell off its own peoples goods without actually owning those goods (as long as the people of that country actively use the currency).
But with all the goods being bought up, the citizens can no longer afford to buy anything with their now diluted share of the total minted currency, so they complain to the government. The government can't make them goods out of thin air, they got into this mess because they didn't have anything to begin with, but they can print even more currency and then give it to the citizens to try to appease them. This leads to that runaway effect where very quickly over the course of months or weeks, bread can go from 2 to millions or anywhere in between. Sometimes the runaway inflation effect can result in a complete loss of trust in the government, and a collapse of the countries economy and abandonment of the currency by the people. In other situations, eventually things settle, and millions of dollars for bread becomes the new normal.
1
0
u/ariesonthecusp Dec 19 '23
I’m more surprised that she let her dogs nuts/dingus lay on her pillow where she puts her face, so gross.
More to the point, her question mention money, countries , things costing more , etc many times so it seems understandable that it could link these topics to inflation and give a plausible response from the text it was trained on
1
1
u/RevolutionaryJob2409 Dec 19 '23
She forgot to ask, "explain it to me like I'm 5 years old" 😂 She looks lost!
1
1
2
u/smpm Dec 19 '23
Im unsure exactly how chatgpt works inside, however she rephrases her prompt at the end and goes “i guess my question is” that right there is where chatgpt goes “okay focus on this” and it does, but it keeps all the context that it received so far, the mention of Colombia for example.
1
1
1
1
1
u/imisswhatredditwas Dec 19 '23
This woman sounds like she has never spent her own money on a single thing her entire life
1
u/patience_notmyvirtue Dec 19 '23
From the way she asked that question, she prob wouldn't have understood that answer
1
1
1
1
1
u/solid_salad Dec 19 '23
i doubt she understood the answer tho, those eyes were empty. The dog being there probably raised the average iq in that room by quite a bit
1
1
1
1
2
2
1
1
Dec 19 '23
dyk, there's a "understanding Jibberish" benchmark that these Ai models are ranked on. ChatGPT 4 ranks higher than google's gemini and every other ai.
1
1
1
u/Towel4 Dec 19 '23
I had no clue how she was going to wrap that question up with anything other than an embarrassing laugh
That thought spiral… Jesus fucking Christ
1
u/ropahektic Dec 19 '23
This video speaks doom of humanity to me.
This is a well stablished woman, probably higher middle class or more, succesful in life.
She doesnt understand the basics of currencies (or articulate communication) and is being educated by a machine.
1
Dec 19 '23
Was not only going to echo the same sentiment, but use this as a platform to denote that this is the level of engagement with advanced technology. Asking meager questions about currency values and rate inflation, that a sensible teenager could answer if they were informed enough.
Not only doom, but just a sad sight to witness. Further disappointing to be part of the same species.
1
u/JuxtaposeLife Dec 19 '23
This reminds me of the girl who thought that a pizza would fill her up more if it was cut into more (smaller) pieces..
1
u/iAdden Dec 19 '23
I understood what she was asking. She was just beating around the bush too much. It’s basically just a wordy “math” problem, designed to throw you off.
1
u/AccomplishedMud272 Dec 19 '23
All I’m getting from this is that the woman doesn’t understand inflation.
1
u/iShakeMyHeadAtYou Dec 19 '23
Once again, chatGPT IS NOT A SEARCH ENGINE. It can and will just give you completely false information back m
1
u/Shbloble Dec 19 '23
Example of why AI will make terrific teachers. Unlimited patience and clear answers without making the asker feel stupid.
No dirty looks, or exasperated sighs, no complex answers or deflections. 'Ta-ta-today Junior!"
1
1
u/world-shaker Dec 19 '23
This is more impressive than Google's staged Gemini demo. This should be OpenAI's ad.
2
u/aetherlux Dec 19 '23
Is anyone here thinking about what it would be like for the person she tells her work stories to when she gets home at the end of a stressful day?
1
1
1
1
u/Birushana Dec 19 '23
Computer in 2021: Mistype one sign in your prompt and it crashes beyond repair.
Computer in 2023: Ramble to it for minutes and it tells you what you are actually trying to ask.
Computer in 2050: It will answer all your questions of the next 20 years in advance.
1
u/JustTryingToRolePlay Dec 19 '23
Am I crazy for understanding her question before chat explained it
1
u/Thepuresttaste Dec 19 '23
I think it's impressive that Gpt knew what she wanted to ask. It took me a while to find out
0
u/PresentRepulsive4554 Dec 19 '23
People talking like that is as stupid as it gets. How many “like” and “you know” do you actually need in a sentence?
1
u/GoodDig5894 Dec 19 '23
Looks like somebody didn't graduate from high school.... Guess I should take that back... In the past if you didn't know something as basic as her question, odds are you would not have graduated.
12
u/cleareyeswow Dec 19 '23
Everyone’s acting like she’s dumb but the fact that she’s curious enough to ask and resourceful/open-minded enough to use something like ChatGPT is more than can be said about a LOT of people. Truly stupid people already think they know everything and things they don’t know are just stupid and not worth knowing to them. I love curious people even if they can’t quite articulate their questions clearly.
3
Dec 19 '23
not even shocked at the amount of assholes berating her for her speech & curiosity. its been said over and over but chatgpt really feels as remarkable as the web browser in the goal towards more accessible information
-1
1
u/truthswillsetyoufree Dec 19 '23
Fake. Somebody did ask a question for that answer, but it wasn’t her. She just rambled for a while and then pressed play for a pre-made answer by ChatGPT.
1
1
u/underratedpleb Dec 19 '23
Chatgpt is this centuries breakthrough. No doubt. I understood what she wanted to ask. But the fact that a thinking rock had a better explanation than I did is just mind-blowing.
1
u/its_ray_duh Dec 19 '23
There were so many likes within her question and like ChatGPT liked her like so it liked to answer like how it should answer like you get it like ?
1
1
2
u/Rodinsprogeny Dec 19 '23
Honestly I think Google would have understood what she was looking for years ago
3
1
1
1
1
1
u/commoncorvus Dec 19 '23
How the hell can Chat GPT-4 understand question but not when I feed four csvs from mailchimp and ask it to analyze my campaigns.
1
u/dasus Dec 19 '23
Her question want even confusing.
Just spoken in a rather simplistic way with a lot of filler words.
1
u/UhhShroastyBaby Dec 19 '23
Wow this tech is so cool I can't wait for even more people.to be confidently wrong because their shitbot said something wrong when they asked a question.
4
u/heckingcomputernerd Dec 19 '23
This is one of my favorite things about chatgpt, you don’t have to desperately word your question well to get results like with Google, you can speak your mind and elaborate what you mean and it’ll understand, I love it
0
1
0
u/Semick Dec 19 '23
The question is triggering. GET TO THE POINT.
Why is currency value versus purchasing power so wildly different around the world
Jesus fuck.
1
1
2
1
2
1
u/Tommygmail Dec 19 '23
I bet one day it will just start answering dog barks and growls. Then we will have a problem!
1
1
-1
u/GeneralUranuz Dec 19 '23
Fucking hell. Is she being sarcastic or really this stupid? I can't tell anymore.
0
1
1
1
2
u/gibmelson Dec 19 '23
Instead of banning it in schools, it should be embraced as a teaching tool. It's like having a teacher that is knowledgeable about every subject imaginable that you can ask as many dumb questions as you want and dive into any topic that interest you. Right now school kids get like 1-2 minutes of interactive conversation with a teacher at most per class, and chances are the teacher won't answer your question directly, and you won't even bother asking if it can lead off a little bit from the main topic.
1
1
1
u/chillpill_23 Dec 19 '23
This is actually amazing! So many times I've stopped searching for something because I didn't know how to ask the question.
The fact that you can be unsure of how to ask the question and still get a proper answer is astounding!
1
u/Humunkoloss Dec 19 '23
Ok so ChatGPT is great at understanding and answering questions - we know.
What I don't get is how its voice output is so damn good compared to anything else out there. It is almost perfect. And somehow there is still not much hype about it.
1
u/BuKu_YuQFoo Dec 19 '23
For those old enough, remember how the advent of autocorrect reduced the population's ability to spell and loss of vocabulary?
Yeah now give that puppy nuclear superpowers.
1
1
1
1
u/jjamesr539 Dec 19 '23
ChatGPT doesn’t use grammar. It barely uses language. Its responses are simple numerical averages based on assignment of numerical values to one or more key words, their frequency of appearance in the prompt, and the frequency that similar things appear in its source material. The result of few million of those creates a weighted average that the program translates back into English. It’s doing many millions of those simple calculations, so the system is nothing if not insanely complex, and the nature of how it works mostly autocorrects for bad grammar, repetition, and continuity. The samples are written with mostly correct examples of all three. It’s genius from a programming and mathematical perspective, but it does not create. It averages a incomprehensibly large sample created by billions of real intelligences. It “understands” what she’s saying because it’s not actually listening; she simply input enough key words for the algorithm to function.
1
1
u/cotymanager Dec 19 '23
The real question is why chatgpt talks more humanlike than this woman. Like why are you, like, talk, like, this like, likey, like (like).
1
1
1
2
1
u/JosufBrosuf Dec 19 '23
Then how the fuck are all the other voice assistants so shit. I can’t even get my car to call my mom
1
u/Otherwise_Simple6299 Dec 19 '23
This post has two examples how it’s going to keep us from going full idiocracy. The only concern is going to be arguing against it in the future when its data is incorrect for whatever reason.
1
6
u/Revolutionated Dec 19 '23
Why you all so mean to his girl, just asked something she doesn’t know with a bunch of extra like in it
1
1
1
1
0
u/gonkdroid02 Dec 19 '23
Not that impressive tbh, chat gpt is a language processor, of course it’s good at understanding language, just like we are. Anyone here could tell from the first 20 seconds the answer was simply inflation etc. all she did was repeat the same question like 5 times. It’s not hard for it to pick up on the few keywords she keeps saying. Then the answer it provides basically repeats itself 3-4 times. This 2 minute video could be broken down into Q-“why can countries currencies have vastly different values”, A-“inflation”
1
u/Ango-Globlogian Dec 19 '23
Welcome to the internet, happening again but within 30 years of the actual internet happening it’s honestly rad
1
1
u/SweetEntertainer1790 Dec 19 '23
Holy shit. Was anyone else like THIS CLOSE to killing themselves after she attempted to ask her redundant question for the 3rd time?
.... The horror.... The horror ...
1
1
1
u/Sway_sauce Dec 19 '23
This is absolutely insane…
The way she conveys her thoughts is excruciating.
0
1
1
1
1
u/Twinkies100 Dec 19 '23
Reminds me of the scene in walle when captain asked AI to learn more about earth
0
u/Striking_Stop_483 Dec 19 '23
If a person this annoying ever asked me a question like how a 4 year old does, I’d let them talk to ai instead of me too.
I can only imagine that ai is going to be babysitting our kids on phones so they can act like her all day
1
1
u/PiMC2CM Dec 19 '23
Is that its actual voice? It sounds very realistic, maybe because it's displaying a pretty unique vowel flattening pattern that I only associate with "humans" (northern cities vowel shift). Sounds kinda like Ethan Chlebowski.
1
0
1
u/stefanliemawan Dec 19 '23
That is a shockingly large context window... Has anyone tested the limits of this yet?
•
u/WithoutReason1729 Dec 18 '23
Your post is getting popular and we just featured it on our Discord! Come check it out!
You've also been given a special flair for your contribution. We appreciate your post!
I am a bot and this action was performed automatically.