Make up your mind Google AI. Is sound faster in air that is less dense or more dense?
Honestly, there is so much wrong in the AI answers that it’s hard to know where to start, but the direct contradiction of itself seems like a good start.
AI is like an accountant who answers “What do you want it to be?” when you ask what 2 + 2 is.
Its all just garbage that gets in the way. My W11 systems was randomly bogging down during documents, excel and powepoint. it was the AI service hogging resources, (c packaged with Office.) Easy fix, just delete the AI executables in a folder, but a product update will probably bring the back.
In water at least both higher temperature and higher pressure will result in higher sound velocity. Weird that it is different for air. I would have assumed that they behave the same.
I guess that the fact that water is incompressible must have something to do with it.
I have found similar contradictions for biology searches. AI in many ways is just a glorified search engine, and it makes mistakes based on what’s available to it.
I don’t understand why people are complaining about these shitty features instead of just turning them off.
In a browser, this will help: https://tenbluelinks.org/
If in the mobile app, look in settings and there are settings related to AI and “labs” that you can turn off.
Not everyone is savvy enough to turn it off, for one. The average person isn’t even going to think about turning it off. That means a lot of people are now being fed a top search result that is the wrong info half of the time. Not just the wrong webpage, but actually the wrong information.
For another thing, it shouldn’t be on by default if it’s so bad. If this was a traditional bug giving you incorrect search results half the time, it wouldn’t be released. But because of this AI race that’s happening, google is willing to release this massive bug live, and on by default. We should be complaining about it!
I also think part of the problem is that it seems really useful. At first glance it seems like it has quickly and succinctly summarized the information that is deep inside other web pages, and presented the answer to specifically what i was looking for (quite confidently, at that.) It’s very easy to fall into a trap of trusting the information told to you.
Yeah I was addressing the audience here on Lemmy though. I get thinking the feature sucks but you can turn it off, which I did a while ago. I think it would make a lot more sense to complain about this in a setting like reddit where you’re not preaching to the choir so directly.
On Lemmy, I feel like 90% of users can build an app from source and debug dependency issues to make it happen. So it’s just odd to me that I still see this getting beat to death here.
Just because you can turn it off for yourself doesn’t mean the problem no longer exists.
“I neeeeed them for wooorrrrrrrk”
I dunno. The hypetrain might be the biggest we’ve seen in our lifetimes, relative to the actual impact of the, y’know, thing. That’s Trillions of Quattloos worth of hype out there pumping the lies of what it can do to people who can’t remember how to clear the cache.