I get rubber-legged standing on the third highest rung of a tall ladder (the highest rung you can safely put your feet on). I don't know how some people are able to stand on the very top and do their work without a care in the world. One misstep or something collides with the ladder from below and you're fucked.
Asking an average-taking machine to take the same average twice is going to look pretty similar yeah. It's kinda freaky because it's new and a black box, but the reason it looks similar is hilariously boring. This is the statistical average of TV installation guides.
Asked ChatGPT the same and got this, actually kinda freaky how similar it is:
Poor guy got murked with a drill by his doppelganger and replaced
it's called step 6 and it's critically necessary to installing the tv properly
Both of them repeatedly show people standing on top of a stepladder. Maybe the ai is trying to kill us after all?
I get rubber-legged standing on the third highest rung of a tall ladder (the highest rung you can safely put your feet on). I don't know how some people are able to stand on the very top and do their work without a care in the world. One misstep or something collides with the ladder from below and you're fucked.
Yes... yes.... almost... oh, oh no, what have you done?
What about gpt 4o? That's supposed to be better I think.
That was 4o
Wow that sucks
baseball cap, baseball cap, flat cap, kippa, kippa...
Same one database
Asking an average-taking machine to take the same average twice is going to look pretty similar yeah. It's kinda freaky because it's new and a black box, but the reason it looks similar is hilariously boring. This is the statistical average of TV installation guides.
If an answer this wrong is considered to be the average TV installation guide... just how wrong would an actually wrong one be?
Sometimes the average is more wrong, like how the average person has slightly under one testicle.
Not really, though. Redoing most prompts will frequently deliver very different results, this one was almost panel-for-panel on the first try.