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+1 to the browser extension idea


Like the idea! Tested on a couple of random research papers with mixed but decent results. Really look forward to leveraging this sort of tool as it improves.


There are numerous commercial applications using GPT-3; from a quick search via Product Hunt:

- https://www.copysmith.ai (paid product)

- https://activechat.ai (paid product)

- https://magicflow.io (paid product)

- https://www.copy.ai (paid product)

- https://ideasai.net (ads)

- https://magicemail.io (in beta)



More examples at the bottom of the owner's page [1], some of which have been posted here before.

[1](https://neural.love/)


Instagram linked in the article is full of more examples [1]. Most are pretty intriguing if not a little creepy (probably some uncanny valley effect).

[1] https://www.instagram.com/ganbrood/



Oh that's awesome, thanks! I was unaware of this. Great product, clearly I'm not the only one this frustrates. Problem solved!

https://threadreaderapp.com/help/about#about-thread-reader


Their Cloud Vision API [1] might be what you're looking for.

[1] https://cloud.google.com/vision


Yeah that's the one I was talking about. It gives some labels about stuff in the image and it works well. But Google Lens is on a different level -- you can send it a picture of a breed or a snake and it will return species and subspecies. Can't find anything like that in the GCP offering.


What sort of results do you get back from Cloud Vision API? The Google Lens example you mentioned is what I assumed it would do.


Nothing near that specific unfortunately. Not much more than "snake" (and occasionally wildly inaccurate species). At least with the ~20 or so photos that I just tested with.


Looks like you're not the only one who's interested: https://support.google.com/photos/thread/17424160?hl=en


Ah, thanks for pointing that out. Added my upvote. Cheers!


Also take a look at:

https://chooch.ai/


Yuval Harari at Davos 2020. Key points:

- Humanity faces three existential threats this century: nuclear war, ecological collapse and technological disruption.

- Technology risks dividing the world into wealthy elites and exploited "data colonies," he explained.

- "If you like the World Cup - you are already a globalist," he said, making the case for better cooperation to tackle the challenges.


Perhaps, but they also have APIs for song data and user listening preferences. It's actually pretty impressive how accessible their platform is to developers.

[1] https://developer.spotify.com/discover/#recommendations


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