I use Bing and Edge daily for work because they integrate nicely with M365 and SharePoint. This Copilot crap does nothing but get in my way.
In fact, Microsoft pushing Copilot in our faces only results in a disruption of productivity. It took months (which is break-neck speed for MSFT) for them to add the option to disable Copilot in PowerPlatform. Why it was forced upon users in the first place is beyond comprehension.
Improvements in technology are great. Options are great. Getting out of my way and getting shit done is even greater.
I don’t know about everyone else but, whether it’s a major corporation or an indie app developer or an automotive manufacturer, the way they all keep changing things so quickly (mostly for the worse) is pushing me away from using tech on a whole.
Without getting too off topic (too late?), there’s just so much consumer frustration from streaming services, cars, phones, wearables, vr, delivery services, etc., that I have to imagine / hope that in the next few years we’re going to start seeing an anti-tech movement pick up more traction. I mean, how many people really want a voice driven AI assistant?
Do I want AI to give me better search results? Sure - if it can do so intelligently. It still gets things wrong sending me down a rabbit hole losing hours of productivity. I don’t have time to train your AI for you so just get out of my way and let me know once you’re smarter than me.
Lmaydev@programming.dev
on 18 Jan 2024 16:53
nextcollapse
I use bing copilot constantly at work. Anytime I need to search for anything I use it.
Saves so much time and gives way more tailored answers than reading blogs/docs.
I can get up and running in a new framework or language instantly now.
It’s also good at finding stuff in less popular languages. For instance searching for vb6 stuff (I know, it sucks haha) almost always gets you VB.net solutions. But bing AI is spot on with it.
It’s totally changed how I work. I can go on a project in a language / framework I’ve never used and be productive within the hour.
grilledcheesecowboy@kbin.social
on 18 Jan 2024 18:06
collapse
This reads like a poor attempt a guerrilla marketing.
Lmaydev@programming.dev
on 18 Jan 2024 18:12
collapse
So does everything that’s positive about a product.
I suppose there’s positive, then there’s “totally changed how I work”. It’s a big call. Maybe a real-world example would make it sound more believable: “before ChatGPT, I would have to sift through stacks of outdated VB6 documentation on $task. This took up most of the day. Yesterday I used a LLM to get a basic implementation of $task then I tidied it up and installed it within an hour.”
Lmaydev@programming.dev
on 19 Jan 2024 18:21
collapse
That sounds way more like an ad to me hehe
The thing is it’s true. Before the internet grew and search engines got big you had a massive manual on your desk for whatever you were using. At my first job I had a yearly budget for buying technical books. That or you’d install a massive help library like MSDN.
Imo this is as big a change as moving from those to blogs and online docs.
captainastronaut@seattlelunarsociety.org
on 18 Jan 2024 17:23
collapse
This! I am getting really tired of being everybody’s beta tester.
threaded - newest
Expectation vs Reality
<img alt="" src="https://s3.amazonaws.com/images.seroundtable.com/bing-google-marketshare-poll-1676499095.png">
Well the vast majority selected the correct answer. 🥲
so expectation is aligning nicely with reality
I use Bing and Edge daily for work because they integrate nicely with M365 and SharePoint. This Copilot crap does nothing but get in my way.
In fact, Microsoft pushing Copilot in our faces only results in a disruption of productivity. It took months (which is break-neck speed for MSFT) for them to add the option to disable Copilot in PowerPlatform. Why it was forced upon users in the first place is beyond comprehension.
Improvements in technology are great. Options are great. Getting out of my way and getting shit done is even greater.
I don’t know about everyone else but, whether it’s a major corporation or an indie app developer or an automotive manufacturer, the way they all keep changing things so quickly (mostly for the worse) is pushing me away from using tech on a whole.
Without getting too off topic (too late?), there’s just so much consumer frustration from streaming services, cars, phones, wearables, vr, delivery services, etc., that I have to imagine / hope that in the next few years we’re going to start seeing an anti-tech movement pick up more traction. I mean, how many people really want a voice driven AI assistant?
Do I want AI to give me better search results? Sure - if it can do so intelligently. It still gets things wrong sending me down a rabbit hole losing hours of productivity. I don’t have time to train your AI for you so just get out of my way and let me know once you’re smarter than me.
I use bing copilot constantly at work. Anytime I need to search for anything I use it.
Saves so much time and gives way more tailored answers than reading blogs/docs.
I can get up and running in a new framework or language instantly now.
It’s also good at finding stuff in less popular languages. For instance searching for vb6 stuff (I know, it sucks haha) almost always gets you VB.net solutions. But bing AI is spot on with it.
It’s totally changed how I work. I can go on a project in a language / framework I’ve never used and be productive within the hour.
This reads like a poor attempt a guerrilla marketing.
So does everything that’s positive about a product.
I suppose there’s positive, then there’s “totally changed how I work”. It’s a big call. Maybe a real-world example would make it sound more believable: “before ChatGPT, I would have to sift through stacks of outdated VB6 documentation on $task. This took up most of the day. Yesterday I used a LLM to get a basic implementation of $task then I tidied it up and installed it within an hour.”
That sounds way more like an ad to me hehe
The thing is it’s true. Before the internet grew and search engines got big you had a massive manual on your desk for whatever you were using. At my first job I had a yearly budget for buying technical books. That or you’d install a massive help library like MSDN.
Imo this is as big a change as moving from those to blogs and online docs.
This! I am getting really tired of being everybody’s beta tester.