Actually Useful AI
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Our community focuses on programming-oriented, hype-free discussion of Artificial Intelligence (AI) topics. We aim to curate content that truly contributes to the understanding and practical application of AI, making it, as the name suggests, "actually useful" for developers and enthusiasts alike.
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In general, anything related to AI is acceptable. However, we encourage you to strive for high-quality content.
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- ๐ Sensationalism: "How I made $1000 in 30 minutes using ChatGPT - the answer will surprise you!"
- โป๏ธ Recycled Content: "Ultimate ChatGPT Prompting Guide" that is the 10,000th variation on "As a (role), explain (thing) in (style)"
- ๐ฎ Blogspam: Anything the mods consider crypto/AI bro success porn sigma grindset blogspam
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Members are expected to engage in on-topic discussions, and exhibit mature, respectful behavior. Those who fail to uphold these standards may find their posts or comments removed, with repeat offenders potentially facing a permanent ban.
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The genius move is to get ChatGPT to write the essay and the critique. I don't even have to try this, to know the output would be better quality than a student's own critique. From a teaching perspective the worst thing about this is the essay and critique would both be full of subtle errors, and writing feedback about subtle errors takes hours. These hours could have been spent guiding students who did work and actually have subtle misunderstandings.
I don't think that's necessarily fair or the point. Usually the point of essays are to get students to think critically about the subject, derive some conclusions and demonstrate evidence to make their points. I think the idea of having students critique an A.I driven essay begins to remove some of the "middle man" of content generation in essay writing, but still gets the student to think about the subject, gather some perspective and ideally look into evidence to support said perspective.
To add that I don't think the goal is to write "perfect" critiquing feedback that's free from errors. Errors are also part of the learning process :)