I also agree bing is nowadays often superior to Google, they're also better than DDG imo.
While it's a good thing that Google gets serious competition, I don't know if Microsoft is the best company for that role. In both cases the incentives are not necessarily aligned with the customer.
I'd say that a measurement always trumps arguments. At least you know how accurate they are, this statement cannot follow from reason:
The JAMA study found that 12.5% of ChatGPT's responses were "hallucinated," and that the chatbot was most likely to present incorrect information when asked about localized treatment for advanced diseases or immunotherapy.
What do you mean the wrong kind of trash? I think folks dump their food and drinks there because it's not allowed in the classroom? Doesn't that make it the right type of trash?
Do you think lawyers physically look at all 11 million pages generated? Surely not everything is relevant. If you would study 11 million pages for a case would you read everything or maybe would you use computer-techniques like "keywords filtering"? (This is mentioned in the article)
I wear masks but I absolutely hate it. Maybe if you work from home you don't notice, but wearing that thing for 9-10 hours can be a real pain. On top of that you miss a lot of a person's face, I had to meet a lot of new people during that time and it was hard.
This has more to do with how bad Google has gotten, such that you're forced to add restrictions like Reddit to get rid of SEO sites and get useful answers. A proper working search engine would show these (and any that are found in Lemmy) high up by default.
Before that self driving cars, before that "Big data", before that 3D printing, before that internet TV, before that "cloud computing", before that web 2.0, before that WAP maybe, internet in general?
Some of those things did turn out to be game changers, others not at all or not so much. It's hard to predict the future.
He's saying they improved in efficiency