He was so boring I switched the radio off and it went on forever.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics...-conservatives
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics...numbers-words/
You may have heard of a new online chatbot called ChatGPT, which promises to revolutionise the field of AI. It’s also quite fun.
You put in a prompt – anything from “write an 800-word essay about the causes of the First World War” to ”generate 10 dating tips in the language of the King James Bible” – and the robot will churn out an answer based on the entire corpus of the English-language internet.
The result is often a little stilted or circumlocutory, but it is always coherent. Sometimes, it can be surprisingly convincing.
There were echoes of ChatGPT in Rishi Sunak’s speech on Wednesday, which sounded at times as though a member of the Number 10 press office had gone to the chatbot with the command: “Write a speech setting out my vision for 2023. Speech must mention nitrous oxide canisters, crack addicts and war memorials. Must not contain any overly-ambitious policy proposals.”
It was like painting by numbers, but with words – although numbers were a big theme, not least the much-trailed pledge to allow all children to study some form of maths until the age of 18.
You’d have thought that teaching people to count would be the last thing that a Tory PM who’d seen the polls recently would want to do. Perhaps it’s to equip younger generations with the complex mental arithmetic needed to work out how long they’ll be waiting for an NHS appointment – “Dr Jones will be able to see you in sin cos tan to the power of x squared days.”
https://www.theguardian.com/politics...-conservatives
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics...numbers-words/
You may have heard of a new online chatbot called ChatGPT, which promises to revolutionise the field of AI. It’s also quite fun.
You put in a prompt – anything from “write an 800-word essay about the causes of the First World War” to ”generate 10 dating tips in the language of the King James Bible” – and the robot will churn out an answer based on the entire corpus of the English-language internet.
The result is often a little stilted or circumlocutory, but it is always coherent. Sometimes, it can be surprisingly convincing.
There were echoes of ChatGPT in Rishi Sunak’s speech on Wednesday, which sounded at times as though a member of the Number 10 press office had gone to the chatbot with the command: “Write a speech setting out my vision for 2023. Speech must mention nitrous oxide canisters, crack addicts and war memorials. Must not contain any overly-ambitious policy proposals.”
It was like painting by numbers, but with words – although numbers were a big theme, not least the much-trailed pledge to allow all children to study some form of maths until the age of 18.
You’d have thought that teaching people to count would be the last thing that a Tory PM who’d seen the polls recently would want to do. Perhaps it’s to equip younger generations with the complex mental arithmetic needed to work out how long they’ll be waiting for an NHS appointment – “Dr Jones will be able to see you in sin cos tan to the power of x squared days.”
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