/omoikane/competitive-strategy-as-story-and-science-fiction-prototyping.

A sense of crisis cannot be shared in words.

after ChatGPT’s Age of Technology Blog

  • Before ChatGPT (= the age of Google), I searched, looked at a number of articles I found, tried them out, and put together a list of what worked!
  • This means that
    • Collection of information
    • verification
    • summary
  • With ChatGPT, collection and summarization are done.
    • Is verification all that’s left?
  • I haven’t tested it yet.ā€ ā€œWhen and under what circumstances did you test it?ā€
  • concrete example
    • If you try to use firestore, samples are written in the old format by default.
      • I know about the new format, so I can write it if you explicitly tell me to write it that way.
      • If you ask me to convert it, I can do that too.
    • When writing a private key for a server-side connection to Firestore in the NextJS env, the current GPT4 says to replace line breaks, but the current NextJS does not have to do that.
    • I’ve experienced both cases multiple times, but I just did a quick search and it didn’t seem to be in Scrapbox.
    • This means that ā€œrecords are leaking due to changes in the normal work flow.
      • Up to now: research, collect fragmentary descriptions, note them down, try them, write down the results, summarize if there is room
      • Now: look it up, the procedure comes up, try it, …
        • The ā€œto do listā€ is already organized in one place and in one row, so the preliminary organization of ā€œtryingā€ is no longer necessary
        • So there is nothing ā€œwrittenā€ at this point.
        • Now that the logs can be shared, it’s even more of a ā€œlaterā€ thing.
          • But the logs are not searchable.
          • Need assistance with summarizing logs and putting them on Scrapbox.

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This page is auto-translated from /nishio/ę—„čØ˜2023-07-07 using DeepL. If you looks something interesting but the auto-translated English is not good enough to understand it, feel free to let me know at @nishio_en. I’m very happy to spread my thought to non-Japanese readers.