I tried using it 2 years ago on a mid complexity webapp and it blew up in my face as soon as things got a little more complex. The hidden mechanics of everything made it absolutely horrible to debug. Including some serverside rendering issues in the svelte code base at the time. The pain wasn't worth it in the end. I'm probably never gonna touch svelte again without having to.
Similar experience with preact.
It works till it doesn't.
I used to just keep a folder full of plain text files but recently (as in the last 2 weeks) moved to obsidian and the ability to add some simple markup (headings, code snippets) as well as search the content of the files easily has been a game changer.
Also it's just a thoughtfully designed, nice to use app (if you aren't an electron hater.. I daily drive VSCode, postman and Slack so am certainly not).
Similarly, Joplin is great. Just migrated 10 years of note out of OneNote. Getting them out of OneNote was arduous; getting them into Joplin was a breeze.
Some things to think about
a) your prompt is ambigious in the sense of do you want masculine nouns or nouns prepended with "der".
b) Prompting in the language you want the output to be usually results in better output.
c) German is actually a really difficult case for articles as feminin nouns can be use "der" depending on context and meaning. Making it harder for LLMs to pick up. e.g. Die Welt dreht sich. Auf der Welt leben. Auf die Welt gekommen.
d) GPT4 is significantly worse in german and most other languages, than in english anyways.
Exactly. When the first news came out about it's ability to "understand" code, find bugs and improve uppon it, I tested it with some snippets of mine. It just gave boilerplate best practices you find on 100 of blogs, but was not able to make meaningful contribution. It claimed to have introduced a feature while only having found another way to write the same snippet. On other things it straight up invented variables & functions that didn't exist.
As long as the task is in it's training set, it can give you a decent answer, but it can't code it just mimics doing so...
Yeah for a few years I thought I was actually +2 older than I was. This started to happen after some major life events that threw everything I knew into question. Since that happened I've found it difficult (or boring) to relate to people who are younger than me. Most of my friends are older.
Try to shift your perspective, asking for help when needed is a strength. It means you know your limits, that your not infalible. Asking for help is often the most productive thing you can do.
It always feels bad not getting anywhere or even worse having to scrap past work, but not checking with others wastests everybodies time. Other people are waiting on your results even if you never meet them. And if nobody is able to help you can either try to plow through or accept defeat.
That's not how statistics work, unless you assume there is a correlation between tab users salary and their willingness to respond to surveys. Which would also be an interesting find
I'm curious if you've actually worked with surveys before, because this is how statistics work. All self-reported data has a bias based on a user's willingness to reply, and considering that predisposition as a variable is required.
This is the exact reason that crime statistics are so crummy, even from anonymous surveys. Very few are compelled to admit to a crime that they haven't been convicted of (and some won't even to admit to that). Or why post-sale NPS scores have a negative bent - you're more likely to respond if you have a complaint.
Then you are probably just in the middle between both. Like with most of these categories it's a spectrum.
Also not all being with social is equal. You may converse less together just enjoying the presence. Have deep passionate conversations or the dreaded forced encounters.
Yeah you are absolutely right. Here in germany a lot of companies pay a decent premium on temporary/loan workers and freelancers just to not be bound to then.