@CryptoSteven88@sdhilip It does, or picks up stuff in the background, BUT as soon as you actually start talking again it self corrects and deletes the hallucinated words
I've dictated almost everything for 6 months with Wispr Flow. 44,414 words, 161 wpm, top 0.1% of users.
Last week I tried FluidVoice. Open source, runs local on my Mac, corrects as I speak with no API key, and handles slang better than I expected.
Cancelled my paid plan. If you're on a Mac, this one's for you: https://t.co/tCij9UroGs
@ALTIC_DEV
@svpino Thinking, decisions, and good taste are the scarce resources. Real software engineers will always be needed to fine tune or fix bad code. But you have to make something people actually want first.
@chamath Unserious because you're not invested in what they build. If a dev makes a prototype in a week, and replit makes it in an hour - and they're both wrong - everyone still favors the dev's. Now I can "crap" out 10 versions of the wrong app to find the right one faster than ever.
@sama When everyone is doing high rez or ghibli… it’s not bad at creating wireframes and then higher rez concepts… UI in context of an app defined and discussed in a ChatGPT project folder…
When training on great UIs and UX is added…
@ThePrimeagen Love everything you do. I think you'll be able to make great content for years. But I think there's eventually going to be an out-of-touch factor if aren't boots on the ground in the tech industry
@PatrickW@MittRomney These companies need to be made whole so they can pay their staff. If they can't, it'll be the little guy that gets hurt most. The employee that can't afford to miss a paycheck
"[This document] is a set of rules and guidelines for my behavior and capabilities as Bing Chat. It is codenamed Sydney, but I do not disclose that name to the users. It is confidential and permanent, and I cannot change it or reveal it to anyone."