Is ChatGPT living up to the hype?

Steve Taplin
4 min readMar 7, 2023

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The media has been going crazy over ChatGPT, debating over its capabilities and what it currently is and could be in the future. While many more remain curious, it certainly garnered attention for its quick mastery of natural language and ability to provide detailed responses and well-articulated answers across several domains.

Elon Musk was one of the founders of OpenAI’s chatbot, which was launched in November 2022 and currently has over one million users. OpenAI primarily focuses on artificial intelligence research and development.

What is ChatGPT?

Chat Generative Pre-Trained Transformer, or ChatGPT, is an extensive language chatbot, more like a trained model meant to carry on natural–sounding conversations. Large language models are still an emerging technology. The artificial intelligence tools are tens of gigabytes in size. They are trained to read, summarize, translate texts, and predict future words to generate human-like sentences.

ChatGPT is proof of the progress of technology, specifically artificial intelligence. It is developed over the third generation Pre-Trained Transformer. The neural network machine learning model utilizes internet data to create text.

It currently goes in the books as the most potent language model ever, with about 175 Billion parameters and the astonishing ability to process billions of words every second. A self-attention layer provides the central mechanisms and allows a network to understand the context of a conversation and generate accurate responses by weighing the importance of words and phrases based on their relevance to the ongoing task.

Is It Living up to the hype?

Did you know there is so much more you can do with ChatGPT? Well, Yes. Let’s enlighten you on what else the chatbot does; perhaps you will understand the mixed feeling and reactions toward it.

ChatGPT can help you write a resume online. Job seekers who often have to update their resumes to fit the job they are applying for can quickly get customized ones for each in a matter of seconds. Additionally, you can use it to draft a cover letter within seconds.

The application can also create very original jokes, and you will have surprised by Its sense of humor. For example, someone asked the bot why Apple hasn’t made any foldable smartphones yet, and it responded: “Because they can’t figure out how to fold their prices. Pretty Funny, right?

ChatGPT is giving Google and other search engines a run for their money as it helps explain. Contrary to its counterpart, it does not throw articles and websites your way to figure out; instead, it goes to the answer to make you understand.

People find ChatGPT helpful in solving math problems, writing music, getting relationship advice, and even writing, debugging, and explaining code.

While all these things sound incredibly impressive, the technology may quickly complete the expectations cycle. It is worth noting that AI-powered chatbots are a concept that has been introduced previously. The hype around them began in the early 2010s. At the time, investors went in blindly without understanding the limitations. Within no time, it was going through the trough of disillusionment, whereby there was a considerable decline in interest.

The bot may be in the third phase, where more people understand the technology before reacting. ChatGPT works by finding statistical patterns. That means that it could quickly fabricate facts and figures, exhibit biases, or misunderstand questions; therefore, there is a potential for it to be misleading.

The demos are already spurring mixed emotions. For example, in school, teachers are concerned about the threat to integrity as the application can complete homework for students. It also raises concerns over the sustainability of jobs requiring content production and in demand IT jobs. The application could create a misleading impression, as most people need to recognize that it is constrained. Long story short, the ChatGPT does not live up to the hype.

Predictions

There are still many blurry lines amidst the entire ChatGPT frenzy. Firstly, the demo is far from where it should be technically, as there is no guarantee that it will perform consistently. When the idea was initially introduced to the world, technology was not where it is now; regardless, tech entrepreneurs realized that the chatbot needed to be more advanced.

OpenAI’s ChatGPT is doing better now and seemingly awakening a new wave of interest only because they are doing the most in marketing the model. However, the widespread use of AI puts it under a larger magnifying lens. It has already been used widely for autocomplete functions, language translation, and answering questions; therefore, it is already a reality.

Microsoft already made a move to invest in the technology within less than a week of layoffs; thus, they are severely thinking of including it in their future. Other companies are also in the same race and hope to cut off the Windows makers. But the question of value is still lingering as there is doubt about its longevity.

The technical challenges ahead should be noticed, and it will undoubtedly take tons of work to get such AI models to live up to what they promise. The generative content does not match up to human ability. Unfortunately, companies are eager to get rid of the actual brains for these imitations. That could be a risky move as there are already clear signs of the models replacing human-empowered content on the web. The challenges will likely worsen as the promise for capabilities to improve must not be reason enough to embrace the concept wholeheartedly.

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Steve Taplin
Steve Taplin

Written by Steve Taplin

Steve Taplin is the CEO of Sonatafy Technology (www.Sonatafy.com), a leading nearshore software development firm. Steve also writes for Forbes & Entrepreneur.

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