There’s no doubt that by now you would have at the very least heard about ChatGPT—if not played around with it, extensively. It’s hours of free entertainment, for now.
If you happen to be a high school teacher, you may have even had the distinct ‘pleasure’ of reading an assignment written by it. Hopefully you’ve caught on. (Having taught some classes, I have to admit, that ChatGPT would probably get a much better grade than most students).
I’ve also heard that ChatGPT has helped many write successful cover letters (especially beloved by HR drones), conduct research, write web content, re-write song lyrics, write poetry and greeting cards, generate product descriptions, map out character outlines, assist with coding, make business plans, and so much more. I’ve even tried to test its skills as a virtual therapist when I was upset; It performed better than a google search, but certainly not as well as a human. Still, it was a resource I could access with a tap…
Keep reading with a 7-day free trial
Subscribe to "Random Minds" by Katherine Brodsky to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.