Graduating art student Shun Onozawa has created this mesmerizing device named “Movement Act” where a golden formula allow all 16 balls to continuously move through it without ever colliding
[read more: https://t.co/3tB8kDtVtY]
@d0nniechen @ruima It looks as though when I enter a prompt explicitly asking for grammar correction, ChatGPT tries its best to keep the grammar rules, and with different prompts it feels more 'relaxed' in this regard.
@d0nniechen @ruima Yes, that's exactly what I did for quite a number of texts. And I've never encountered a case where ChatGPT could not find a mistake that Grammarly could, but I had lots of examples of the reverse. Here's my latest article on the subject: https://t.co/ruzU3oHBGv
@d0nniechen @ruima Can you give an example of such a mistake? I've been testing it thoroughly and have not seen a single case where ChatGPT would not find a mistake that Grammarly would find.
@alfie_nbo@oleg008 @Grammarly ChatGPT proofreads better than other tools. I've made several benchmarks comparing ChatGPT, Grammarly, QuillBot, etc. Here's the most recent one: https://t.co/ruzU3oHBGv
@TanmayBrainiac It is not as simple as this table suggests. The more mistakes a tool finds, the more "false positives" you get. I'd recommend linking the article for details. https://t.co/ruzU3oHBGv
@StrategyBurg @LifeElevater Yeah. I tested both free (solid bar) and paid (stashed bar). Do you use a web-interface or some kind of a messenger? I used https://t.co/vew9nGfAZi and spent $0.41 out of the $18 quota during my (quite extensive) testing, as reported on the 'Usage' page https://t.co/kximR9B3XH
@StrategyBurg @LifeElevater How do they compare in your opinion? I've benchmarked ChatGPT against a number of grammar checkers. Does it match your experience? https://t.co/6JFhFArI3A