I can’t trust book marks I just use open tabs if I want to keep track of info, that’s why I have 75 tabs open most of the time
Comment on can't beat the classics
cm0002@lemmy.world 16 hours ago
Kowowow@lemmy.ca 15 hours ago
arudesalad@sh.itjust.works 10 hours ago
Finding the setting that stopped tabs from being reset every time I closed my browser changed my life. I just don’t if it was a positive or negative change yet
cm0002@lemmy.world 15 hours ago
Are you me? I have hundreds open at any given moment lmao
Raptorox@sh.itjust.works 12 hours ago
A friend of mine has 2.5k, and I don’t even know how many I have open, I have 13 windows of either ~5 or 100-200 tabs
TheKingBee@lemmy.world 8 hours ago
I have 172 spread over 13 windows, loosely grouped by subject, but it gets muddied fast as I often just start searching new things in existing windows and then have some eclectic mixes.
huppakee@lemm.ee 15 hours ago
I am like this as well but since i also postpone everything i end up with a dozen more month after month so for quite a while now i have been using raindrop.io and it is the best thing for me. You can regularly export if you worry about losing data, don’t believe your privacy is at risk there but you might want to check for yourself if you value this a lot.
BroBot9000@lemmy.world 15 hours ago
Manually reading through is going to teach you more and give more context than a txt parser’s summary.
Just use your brain and don’t outsource your thinking.
Kowowow@lemmy.ca 14 hours ago
To pull this off I’d need everything in audio form
yourgodlucifer@sh.itjust.works 5 hours ago
Use text to speech?
Kowowow@lemmy.ca 4 hours ago
can I have an ai or maybe go old school rss feed collect stuff and read it to me?
IrateAnteater@sh.itjust.works 15 hours ago
Depends on what knowledge we are talking about. Personally, I’d be feeding it tons of manuals so that I could ask questions like “Which version of software x introduced feature y?” There’s no extra context I need, I just need a version number to give to a customer. And in my industry, that type of info just doesn’t show up on Google. So having an LLM that can answer the question in seconds saves me an hour of sifting through manuals.
cm0002@lemmy.world 15 hours ago
LMAO yea using an LLM to dig through things to find what I need faster so that I can read further on the non-summarized version for more depth is “outsourcing my thinking” 🙄
BroBot9000@lemmy.world 13 hours ago
oh poor baby 🥺do you need the robot to read through your bookmarks? 🥺 yeah? 🥺do you need the bo-bot to write you essay too? 🥺 yeah ??? 🥺 you can’t do it?? 🥺 you’re a moron?? 🥺do you need chat gpt to fuck your wife ??
Kowowow@lemmy.ca 4 hours ago
jokes on you I don’t have a wife
huppakee@lemm.ee 15 hours ago
Not true in all cases, yes if you want to read a novel you will enjoy reading it way more than reading a computer generated summary. But if you want to source information it’s a whole other story. Also, you still need to use your brain to understand summaries
IrateAnteater@sh.itjust.works 16 hours ago
That’s exactly what I was thinking. And this is actually the first time I’ve heard of some use of LLMs that I may actually be interested in.
RandomVideos@programming.dev 1 hour ago
LLM has its uses if you arent relying too much on it or trusting it to give true information
cm0002@lemmy.world 15 hours ago
Yea the anti-AI crowd on Lemmy tends to misplace their anger on all AI when a lot of their anger should be directed to the corporate BS shoving it everywhere and anywhere to make a profit and line go up
jerakor@startrek.website 13 hours ago
Nestle bottling water is bad, so my solution will be to never drink any water and make fun of people who do. This is how it always comes off to me.
arudesalad@sh.itjust.works 10 hours ago
The stuff that gets made fun of by most anti AI people is AI “art” that people try to argue is equivalent to real, human art.
The main reason people hate AI in general is because nearly all models use data that was taken without permission of the owner of it.
It isn’t equivalent to bottled water, it is equivalent to the chocolate industry, it isn’t essential, so I will wait until an AI that was trained ethically without stealing data is made and doesn’t try to replace human art.
pennomi@lemmy.world 15 hours ago
As always, technology isn’t the enemy, it’s the corporations controlling it that are. And honestly the freely available local LLMs aren’t too far behind the big ones.
lmuel@sopuli.xyz 13 hours ago
Well in some ways they are. It also depends a lot on the hardware you have of course. A normal 16GB GPU won’t fit huge LLMs.
The smaller ones are getting impressively good at some things but a lot of them are still struggling when using non-English languages for example.
Mac@mander.xyz 12 hours ago
Wow, that’s a big net. Surely your comment is applicable to all your catch.
Right?
JustAnotherKay@lemmy.world 11 hours ago
arudesalad@sh.itjust.works 10 hours ago
I am very strongly anti-AI, I think it has some legitimate uses that have probably saved and improved a lot of lives (like AlphaFold). My main problem (and most people’s main problem with it) is the way it has been trained with stolen data and art.
Since I don’t know much about non-corporate AI I am interested to know how an open-source LLM just trained off of your bookmarks would work, I assumed it would still need to be trained off of stolen data still so it can form sentences as well as the more popular models but I may be wrong, maybe the volume of data needed for a system like that is small enough that it can just be trained off of data willingly donated to it? I doubt it though.