>ask ChatGPT for a list of books to help me become smarter>output is not satisfying>ask ChatGPT to make a list of qualities a smart person has>ask ChatGPT to make a series of prompts that will each output a list of books on how to develop each of the qualities that make a person smarter>find a pdf or epub of each book on Anna's or elsewhere>collect the books by category into folders in Google Drive>upload each collection into its own project in NotebookLM>ask NotebookLM to break down the contents in the collection in a digestible way, then to make a series of prompts I can use to get through the contents with the Audio Overview podcast feature>get a series of 30-50 minute podcast deep dives into the subject matters>listen to them on my way to and from workBy the end of next year, I will be the smartest poster on /lit/
>>24830446haha OP I love froggo XD
>>24830489fpbp/thread
>>24830446It’s weird people are acting like they’re inventing the wheel here. Abridged versions are old. Reader’s digest was popular for a very long time. Even today companies like Blinkist exist to sell you bulletpoint versions of fiction and nonfiction in “podcast” (audio) form. You could read literary magazines, watch free online lectures, or how about critical studies books that dissect entire genres or eras.
Tried it go refresh my memory on books I read and it's shit. It skips most important points, adds news ones that weren't in the book and keeps criticizing the work for being outdated and problematic. What you're getting is AI's personal interpretation of the work through who misconstrues the work for propaganda purposes
>>24830614Without the "through"
>>24830614AI doesn’t have a personal interpretation because it can’t actually reason. The idea that it could is a marketing line to hook the gullible.
>>24830619Well whatever it's been fed to parrot, it does whenever it can
>>24830446LLM chatbots have a bit of the same problem search engines also have, where you only get insightful answers if you already know enough to ask specific insightful questions. Asking 'chatgpt plz make me smert' will give you very shallow and useless answers. Instead ask questions like 'please give me an overview of influential academic works in the field of historiography' and you actually get a pretty good outline of the field.Asking another AI to summarize the content is also counterproductive. You become smart by thinking about stuff, not by knowing stuff. You have to put in the effort yourself, dont let a chatbot pre-chew your thoughts.
>>24830446>ask ChatGPTYou will NEVER be smart.
try it with a topic you know in-depth>inb4 you don't know anythingand compare result
>>24830638>Asking another AI to summarize the content is also counterproductive. You become smart by thinking about stuff, not by knowing stuff. You have to put in the effort yourself, dont let a chatbot pre-chew your thoughts.What AI tools can I use to do this, then?
>>24831245Only use the AI text chat to get ai gfs and have text-sex with them, usually forcefully, without consent.
>>24830644You will—never—be a prompt engineer.
>>24830604There are cultural and knowledge compendiums trivia enthusiasts use. And those are presumably fact checked and edited. Not sure why OP just wouldn't get one of those. I still can't get the hang of AI. It makes up too much shit, and I'm not sure how you'd know without knowing the subject. I mostly use it to practice languages. Hopefully it's not teaching me all wrong.
>>24831289you WILL be unemployed
>>24831379Not true, your mom's mouth is always open for business
I asked ChatGPT how to become a more strategic thinker, and one book it recommended was Thinking in Systems, A Primer, by Meadows. I feel it has made me a better thinker, and I will now go ask for more suggestions
The impending Butlerian Jihad will smash your machines or will smash you. Either way a machine won’t be doing your thinking anymore.
>ask ChatGPTDo you tell people you “ask” Google questions? You sound like a geriatric retard that talks to customer service chatbots like real people.
>>24830446>Ask ChatGPTDidn't read further. Stop it.
>>24830446How to win friends and influence people48 laws of powerThe princeThe art of warMein kampfThe Holy BibleMeditationsLetters of a stoicRest is asinine
>>24830446I played around with ChatGPT to act as a tradition liberal arts tutor. It was fun for a day or two, and then I got bored.
>>24832788
>>24833480Don't you ever get tired of posting This retort
>>24833720That's the first time I entered that prompt and posted it.
>>24833747Sure it is.
>>24830446smart boi