STEADYMOBBIN 22
Footballguy
Are any of you currently using AI paid versions? What’s the coolest thing you can do with them? How much do they cost a month? is there anything I can feed a piece of paper and say “do this”?
Are any of you currently using AI paid versions? What’s the coolest thing you can do with them? How much do they cost a month? is there anything I can feed a piece of paper and say “do this”?
Pig butchering scamsFollowup for people who answer yes, what do you use it for?
Pig butchering scamsFollowup for people who answer yes, what do you use it for?
Projects? Sure. I'm retired, single, bored, lonely, fascinated and could always use more money. I vetted about 50 "make money with AI" youtube videos. I did a few of them that made sense and seemed easy enough for an old tech challenged fart like me. I'm not discussing them here. I'll make 3-4k this month with little effort. This is month 5 and it was peanuts at first. It's cheesy content generation and affiliate links. I mentioned in the other thread I had AI write a bunch of book reviews. Posted them on 40 different sites with the link to a free audible sign up. Someone uses the link, I get $15 from Amazon. Planning which books to review was just about letting AI seek the best ones for getting attention. 50 reviews were done in a couple hours. I edited them to make them sound human. A tool I found posted them everywhere. Passive income. I could start now and have 50 more up in a couple hours or tomorrow if I edit them.
This is ruining the internet.
50 reviews were done in a couple hours.
Tell me if this is inaccurate:
describe the footballguys forum
Yeah a thing with a lot of AI things like this is that it can be very generic, if not completely inaccurate, if something is fairly nicheTell me if this is inaccurate:
describe the footballguys forum
It's not inaccurate, it's just lifeless passive prose
50 reviews were done in a couple hours.
Did you read any of the books?
I imagine that the stories it's grabbing from these countries were written by AI as well.Also, I use it for what I describe as under-reported news. It will usually grab stories from Africa, Asia and South America. Legacy and social media cover the same stuff.
We have a thread for this. I only mention it because AI is going to change the world like nothing ever. That thread should be 100 pages. I'm currently paying $20 a month for Claude. I've purchased a couple tools that made a couple projects easier. I recommend Gemini. On a free 30 day trial atm and $20 a month after that. I'll probably switch. It's Google. I have tons of stuff in Google docs. I have a Pixel phone and Google smart home stuff, so Google AI will probably be more useful than Anthropic (Claude).
Projects? Sure. I'm retired, single, bored, lonely, fascinated and could always use more money. I vetted about 50 "make money with AI" youtube videos. I did a few of them that made sense and seemed easy enough for an old tech challenged fart like me. I'm not discussing them here. I'll make 3-4k this month with little effort. This is month 5 and it was peanuts at first. It's cheesy content generation and affiliate links. I mentioned in the other thread I had AI write a bunch of book reviews. Posted them on 40 different sites with the link to a free audible sign up. Someone uses the link, I get $15 from Amazon. Planning which books to review was just about letting AI seek the best ones for getting attention. 50 reviews were done in a couple hours. I edited them to make them sound human. A tool I found posted them everywhere. Passive income. I could start now and have 50 more up in a couple hours or tomorrow if I edit them.
I wrote a novel in the 90s about weather modification. My dad's career. I had access to once top secret classified research he did and turned it into fiction. Even had an agent shop it, but nada. So I'm letting AI re-write it with 30 years of advancement and fool's thinking we can actually control the weather for political purposes. It's kind of a hot topic if you want some laughs.
I've taught myself to play guitar a little. I've used a keyboard with Ableton and Mixcraft for a few years. Those are daws if you don't know. Digital audio workstations. I like making my own music. Trying not making. I have a concept album in mind about AI killing us all. It's fun and my kid loves a couple of the songs. AI is way better at writing novels and making music than me. Incredible vocals, btw.
I use it for search instead of Google. I use it to speak better Spanish. I use it alot.
50 reviews were done in a couple hours.
Did you read any of the books?
Nope. Don't judge me. i know it's gross. I followed youtube instructions out of curiosity and boredom. I stopped.
We have a thread for this. I only mention it because AI is going to change the world like nothing ever. That thread should be 100 pages. I'm currently paying $20 a month for Claude. I've purchased a couple tools that made a couple projects easier. I recommend Gemini. On a free 30 day trial atm and $20 a month after that. I'll probably switch. It's Google. I have tons of stuff in Google docs. I have a Pixel phone and Google smart home stuff, so Google AI will probably be more useful than Anthropic (Claude).
Projects? Sure. I'm retired, single, bored, lonely, fascinated and could always use more money. I vetted about 50 "make money with AI" youtube videos. I did a few of them that made sense and seemed easy enough for an old tech challenged fart like me. I'm not discussing them here. I'll make 3-4k this month with little effort. This is month 5 and it was peanuts at first. It's cheesy content generation and affiliate links. I mentioned in the other thread I had AI write a bunch of book reviews. Posted them on 40 different sites with the link to a free audible sign up. Someone uses the link, I get $15 from Amazon. Planning which books to review was just about letting AI seek the best ones for getting attention. 50 reviews were done in a couple hours. I edited them to make them sound human. A tool I found posted them everywhere. Passive income. I could start now and have 50 more up in a couple hours or tomorrow if I edit them.
I wrote a novel in the 90s about weather modification. My dad's career. I had access to once top secret classified research he did and turned it into fiction. Even had an agent shop it, but nada. So I'm letting AI re-write it with 30 years of advancement and fool's thinking we can actually control the weather for political purposes. It's kind of a hot topic if you want some laughs.
I've taught myself to play guitar a little. I've used a keyboard with Ableton and Mixcraft for a few years. Those are daws if you don't know. Digital audio workstations. I like making my own music. Trying not making. I have a concept album in mind about AI killing us all. It's fun and my kid loves a couple of the songs. AI is way better at writing novels and making music than me. Incredible vocals, btw.
I use it for search instead of Google. I use it to speak better Spanish. I use it alot.
We have a thread for this. I only mention it because AI is going to change the world like nothing ever. That thread should be 100 pages. I'm currently paying $20 a month for Claude. I've purchased a couple tools that made a couple projects easier. I recommend Gemini. On a free 30 day trial atm and $20 a month after that. I'll probably switch. It's Google. I have tons of stuff in Google docs. I have a Pixel phone and Google smart home stuff, so Google AI will probably be more useful than Anthropic (Claude).
Projects? Sure. I'm retired, single, bored, lonely, fascinated and could always use more money. I vetted about 50 "make money with AI" youtube videos. I did a few of them that made sense and seemed easy enough for an old tech challenged fart like me. I'm not discussing them here. I'll make 3-4k this month with little effort. This is month 5 and it was peanuts at first. It's cheesy content generation and affiliate links. I mentioned in the other thread I had AI write a bunch of book reviews. Posted them on 40 different sites with the link to a free audible sign up. Someone uses the link, I get $15 from Amazon. Planning which books to review was just about letting AI seek the best ones for getting attention. 50 reviews were done in a couple hours. I edited them to make them sound human. A tool I found posted them everywhere. Passive income. I could start now and have 50 more up in a couple hours or tomorrow if I edit them.
I wrote a novel in the 90s about weather modification. My dad's career. I had access to once top secret classified research he did and turned it into fiction. Even had an agent shop it, but nada. So I'm letting AI re-write it with 30 years of advancement and fool's thinking we can actually control the weather for political purposes. It's kind of a hot topic if you want some laughs.
I've taught myself to play guitar a little. I've used a keyboard with Ableton and Mixcraft for a few years. Those are daws if you don't know. Digital audio workstations. I like making my own music. Trying not making. I have a concept album in mind about AI killing us all. It's fun and my kid loves a couple of the songs. AI is way better at writing novels and making music than me. Incredible vocals, btw.
I use it for search instead of Google. I use it to speak better Spanish. I use it alot.
Thanks. Which thread is it?
We have a thread for this. I only mention it because AI is going to change the world like nothing ever. That thread should be 100 pages. I'm currently paying $20 a month for Claude. I've purchased a couple tools that made a couple projects easier. I recommend Gemini. On a free 30 day trial atm and $20 a month after that. I'll probably switch. It's Google. I have tons of stuff in Google docs. I have a Pixel phone and Google smart home stuff, so Google AI will probably be more useful than Anthropic (Claude).
Projects? Sure. I'm retired, single, bored, lonely, fascinated and could always use more money. I vetted about 50 "make money with AI" youtube videos. I did a few of them that made sense and seemed easy enough for an old tech challenged fart like me. I'm not discussing them here. I'll make 3-4k this month with little effort. This is month 5 and it was peanuts at first. It's cheesy content generation and affiliate links. I mentioned in the other thread I had AI write a bunch of book reviews. Posted them on 40 different sites with the link to a free audible sign up. Someone uses the link, I get $15 from Amazon. Planning which books to review was just about letting AI seek the best ones for getting attention. 50 reviews were done in a couple hours. I edited them to make them sound human. A tool I found posted them everywhere. Passive income. I could start now and have 50 more up in a couple hours or tomorrow if I edit them.
I wrote a novel in the 90s about weather modification. My dad's career. I had access to once top secret classified research he did and turned it into fiction. Even had an agent shop it, but nada. So I'm letting AI re-write it with 30 years of advancement and fool's thinking we can actually control the weather for political purposes. It's kind of a hot topic if you want some laughs.
I've taught myself to play guitar a little. I've used a keyboard with Ableton and Mixcraft for a few years. Those are daws if you don't know. Digital audio workstations. I like making my own music. Trying not making. I have a concept album in mind about AI killing us all. It's fun and my kid loves a couple of the songs. AI is way better at writing novels and making music than me. Incredible vocals, btw.
I use it for search instead of Google. I use it to speak better Spanish. I use it alot.
Were you able to feed AI writing you've done to get it more in your voice? I keep thinking between a bunch of old race reports on a blog that I've written and a few thousand posts here, there's enough I could feed it to make it sound more like me.
I find Gemini to be way behind
Yeah like I’m glad he’s making extra money I guess but I dislike everything about what he posted.Projects? Sure. I'm retired, single, bored, lonely, fascinated and could always use more money. I vetted about 50 "make money with AI" youtube videos. I did a few of them that made sense and seemed easy enough for an old tech challenged fart like me. I'm not discussing them here. I'll make 3-4k this month with little effort. This is month 5 and it was peanuts at first. It's cheesy content generation and affiliate links. I mentioned in the other thread I had AI write a bunch of book reviews. Posted them on 40 different sites with the link to a free audible sign up. Someone uses the link, I get $15 from Amazon. Planning which books to review was just about letting AI seek the best ones for getting attention. 50 reviews were done in a couple hours. I edited them to make them sound human. A tool I found posted them everywhere. Passive income. I could start now and have 50 more up in a couple hours or tomorrow if I edit them.
This is ruining the internet. Trying to get a review on any topic is just a crapshoot anymore and is getting much worse very quick due to these tools.
SEO turned the internet into garbage, but AI is lighting it on fire.
Yes eventually AI will outpace actual content and the AI will be suing AI to make their new AI. That will either make distinguishing between real and fake nearly impossible or the AI will become so bad like when we make copies of a copy of a copy of a copy.I imagine that the stories it's grabbing from these countries were written by AI as well.Also, I use it for what I describe as under-reported news. It will usually grab stories from Africa, Asia and South America. Legacy and social media cover the same stuff.
Oh, I'm definitely judging.50 reviews were done in a couple hours.
Did you read any of the books?
Nope. Don't judge me. i know it's gross. I followed youtube instructions out of curiosity and boredom. I stopped.
And no judging. I'm super interested in this and where it's going.
what is it giving you over the free version, other than increased access? (which has never been a problem for me)I use the pro version of ChatGPT. The $20/mo version, not the enterprise version that's like $299/mo.
I use it for all kinds of stuff for work (property management). For writing listing descriptions for the properties, photo captions, etc. I also use it to help me name properties because I'm not super creative. For instance it came up with "Hyperspace Hideaway".
When I'm hiring people I use it to help come up with a list of interview questions and things to look for.
At home I use it for all kinds of stuff. The most common is simple search, which I like better than "googling" stuff now. I like that they've come up with searchgpt.com as a quicker shortcut to enter a search prompt.
It's also my new go-to when I need to figure out how to do something, most commonly with software. IE instead of googling "how do I make a non-scrollable header row in google sheets" and sifting through results or youtube videos with 4 minutes of fluff at the beginning, I just ask chatgpt. It's wordy by default but you can just tell it to be succinct and it's much faster than googling or going to youtube. In fact I've mentioned in the stock thread that I think people are overlooking this as a major competitor to google's core business as I could definitely see a future 10 years from now where traditional search is a rarity.
I was reminded of this issue recently when I asked Gemini to dig up a shipment tracking number from an email—something I do fairly often. It appeared to work just fine, with the robot citing the correct email and spitting out a long string of numbers. I didn't realize anything was amiss until I tried to look up the tracking number. It didn't work in Google's search-based tracker, and going to the US Postal Service website yielded an error.
That's when it dawned on me: The tracking number wasn't a tracking number; it was a confabulation. It was a believable one, too. The number was about the right length, and like all USPS tracking numbers, it started with a nine. I could have looked up the tracking number myself in a fraction of the time it took to root out Gemini's mistake, which is very, very frustrating. Gemini appeared confident that it had completed the task I had given it, but getting mad at the chatbot wouldn't do any good—it can't understand my anger any more than it can understand the nature of my original query.
At this point, I would kill for Assistant's "Sorry, I don't understand."
This is just one of many similar incidents I've had with Gemini over the last year—I can't count how many times Gemini has added calendar events to the wrong day or put incorrect data in a note. In fairness, Gemini usually gets these tasks right, but its mechanical imagination wanders often enough that its utility as an assistant is suspect. Assistant just couldn't do a lot of things, but it didn't waste my time acting like it could. Gemini is more insidious, claiming to have solved my problem when, in fact, it's sending me down a rabbit hole to fix its mistakes. If a human assistant operated like this, I would have to conclude they were incompetent or openly malicious.
However, those claiming we're mere months away from AI agents replacing most programmers should adjust their expectations because models aren't good enough at the debugging part, and debugging occupies most of a developer's time. That's the suggestion of Microsoft Research, which built a new tool called debug-gym to test and improve how AI models can debug software.
....
This approach is much more successful than relying on the models as they're usually used, but when your best case is a 48.4 percent success rate, you're not ready for primetime.
It's only a matter of time though.![]()
AI isn’t ready to replace human coders for debugging, researchers say
Even when given access to tools, AI agents can’t reliably debug software.arstechnica.com
However, those claiming we're mere months away from AI agents replacing most programmers should adjust their expectations because models aren't good enough at the debugging part, and debugging occupies most of a developer's time. That's the suggestion of Microsoft Research, which built a new tool called debug-gym to test and improve how AI models can debug software.
....
This approach is much more successful than relying on the models as they're usually used, but when your best case is a 48.4 percent success rate, you're not ready for primetime.
It's only a matter of time though.![]()
AI isn’t ready to replace human coders for debugging, researchers say
Even when given access to tools, AI agents can’t reliably debug software.arstechnica.com
However, those claiming we're mere months away from AI agents replacing most programmers should adjust their expectations because models aren't good enough at the debugging part, and debugging occupies most of a developer's time. That's the suggestion of Microsoft Research, which built a new tool called debug-gym to test and improve how AI models can debug software.
....
This approach is much more successful than relying on the models as they're usually used, but when your best case is a 48.4 percent success rate, you're not ready for primetime.
The pace of change only accelerates.
I'd say we are already here. The vibe coding stuff is extremely impressive.It's only a matter of time though.![]()
AI isn’t ready to replace human coders for debugging, researchers say
Even when given access to tools, AI agents can’t reliably debug software.arstechnica.com
However, those claiming we're mere months away from AI agents replacing most programmers should adjust their expectations because models aren't good enough at the debugging part, and debugging occupies most of a developer's time. That's the suggestion of Microsoft Research, which built a new tool called debug-gym to test and improve how AI models can debug software.
....
This approach is much more successful than relying on the models as they're usually used, but when your best case is a 48.4 percent success rate, you're not ready for primetime.
The pace of change only accelerates.
I'd say we are already here. The vibe coding stuff is extremely impressive.It's only a matter of time though.![]()
AI isn’t ready to replace human coders for debugging, researchers say
Even when given access to tools, AI agents can’t reliably debug software.arstechnica.com
However, those claiming we're mere months away from AI agents replacing most programmers should adjust their expectations because models aren't good enough at the debugging part, and debugging occupies most of a developer's time. That's the suggestion of Microsoft Research, which built a new tool called debug-gym to test and improve how AI models can debug software.
....
This approach is much more successful than relying on the models as they're usually used, but when your best case is a 48.4 percent success rate, you're not ready for primetime.
The pace of change only accelerates.
![]()
Cursor: From Idea to App in 15 Minutes (Without Knowing How to Code)
Let's build an app that has 2M users and $1M ARR in 15 minutescreatoreconomy.so
My boss is incredibly talented product visionary and he's creating and de-bugging and launching applications within just a few days. He's all in on the vibe coding.