Anybody tried AI Tools?
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Anybody tried AI Tools?
Hello,
I was wondering if anybody tried AI tools for their day-to-day activities.
I have tried a few. Some of them are good but it still requires manual editing.
It can save quite a lot of time.
What tools you have tried?
I was wondering if anybody tried AI tools for their day-to-day activities.
I have tried a few. Some of them are good but it still requires manual editing.
It can save quite a lot of time.
What tools you have tried?
- SARubin
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Re: Anybody tried AI Tools?
Hello movijis715,
Welcome to the forum.
I'm sure most people have their own opinions about AI, and I'm no exception to that rule. So here's my take on it...
AI is getting better than it was just a couple years ago, and if we're only looking for generic copy to fill some pages, it's a viable option for some people to use.
But when it comes to authentic personality in our writing...
Robots don't understand emotions, context, or have personalities. And the writing I've seen coming from AI reflects that fact.
Lately I've heard a lot of rhetoric about one called Jarvis. It gets mixed reviews. I haven't tried it myself, yet, but the reviews from writers I respect are all pretty much unanimous...
...It's a tool that can save time with first drafts. But like all tools it's only as good as the person using it. And you still need to spend a lot of time editing and re-writing the copy.
Simply put, it doesn't write high quality finished copy by itself any more than a hammer can build a house all by itself. (I'd like to see AI come up with a metaphor like that one. Then I'll give it another look )
Welcome to the forum.
I'm sure most people have their own opinions about AI, and I'm no exception to that rule. So here's my take on it...
AI is getting better than it was just a couple years ago, and if we're only looking for generic copy to fill some pages, it's a viable option for some people to use.
But when it comes to authentic personality in our writing...
Robots don't understand emotions, context, or have personalities. And the writing I've seen coming from AI reflects that fact.
Lately I've heard a lot of rhetoric about one called Jarvis. It gets mixed reviews. I haven't tried it myself, yet, but the reviews from writers I respect are all pretty much unanimous...
...It's a tool that can save time with first drafts. But like all tools it's only as good as the person using it. And you still need to spend a lot of time editing and re-writing the copy.
Simply put, it doesn't write high quality finished copy by itself any more than a hammer can build a house all by itself. (I'd like to see AI come up with a metaphor like that one. Then I'll give it another look )
A good marketer knows how to think like a marketer - A great marketer learns how to think like the customer...
SARubin - Direct Response Copywriter / Conversion Flow Expert
SARubin - Direct Response Copywriter / Conversion Flow Expert
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Re: Anybody tried AI Tools?
I have tried some AI tools out of those Jarvis is quite good.
Yes, it requires some editing.
You can also try Jarvis free for 5 days here [affiliate link removed by moderator]
It is helpful in writer's block.
Yes, it requires some editing.
You can also try Jarvis free for 5 days here [affiliate link removed by moderator]
It is helpful in writer's block.
Re: Anybody tried AI Tools?
I've mainly used Jarvis and looking at other alternatives also - any ideas please do share guys. Still haven't found a tool that truly delivers on its promise.
I'm currently using it for work where there's a need to scale up content output and, while skeptical to begin with, I do believe the technology can be used for simple things like bulk creation of short product descriptions, headings, titles, meta tags, etc. But for actual sales copy, I'm not convinced.
The technology is interesting, though, and it's getting better all the time. But it's also fundamentally flawed in various ways, for the exact same reason that we are. Big Tech want to sell us this crock that AI is something that thinks for itself but that's not true in the slightest. Essentially it's just a mirror for humanity in general, so GBT3 tools like Jarvis simply reflect back what we feed it. Hence its flaws; namely accuracy, originality, formality and unpredictability.
Accuracy: Since it's essentially grabbing bits and pieces of information of existing content to create a (generally coherent) mosiac of words, everything it writes needs to be carefully fact-checked in case it spews out something that's blatently false at best, or potentially libelous at worst.
This is exacerbated by the fact that, with Jarvis, the pool of content it's pulling from has not been updated since 2019 - and let's face it a LOT has happened since then.
Originality: Not only do you have to fact check it, plagiarism also rears its head quite a lot. It's stitching things together from various sources and usually just rephrasing them. And because it's all happening in some mystical ai algorithm we can never be sure of what those sources are. So in addition to them being potentially inaccurate there may be legal and/or duplicate content issues. At best you tend to get a lot of homoginised content that reads like every generic sales pitch, informercial script or blog post that's been churned out for the past decade.
Formality: This has a knock-on effect for anyone looking to create content for specific industries and/or markets, especially those outside the US. Setting it to UK English, for example, will alter the spelling and grammar accordingly, but it's not yet smart enough to know that certain phrases don't translate very well this side of the Atlantic.
Yes, you can set different TOVs on it but even when I've asked it to write in a formal tone, it continues to pump out content full of jaded CTAs, chirpy cliches and cutesy phrases - the kind of stuff that would make George Orwell vomit blood.
It's not always the most succint either. Which is anathema for us copywriters. We favour lean, impactful content that gets straight to the point, but poor ole Jarvis often likes to strap an onion to his belt and ramble on like Abraham Simpson. As for stuff like Technical Writing or if you're creating content for a heavily-regulated industry like Legal, Financial, Medical, Academic... forget about it.
If somebody can create software that does manage to clear that stumbling block I imagine there would be huge demand.
Unpredictability: All of these above issues are compounded by the fact that AI writing software is essentially creating context numerically, and assigning meaning based not on an intrinsic understanding of what these words and concepts mean, but rather on the statistical/mathematical relationship between them. So it still makes lots of obvious mistakes and often times runs off on weird tangents veer way off the original topic. You can feed it additional information for added context to stop it going off the rails but again it's unpredictable and when things go wrong it starts to either repeat itself at best, or starts pumping out absolute gibberish like zen haikus on acid.
Also, because it's a machine that draws in data from the internet, it's also culturally tone deaf, just like the internet. So when I tried to get it to create a test article on the upcoming World Cup this year, it started ranting about (the host nation) Qatar's human rights record and when asking it to create a product description for the Irish market, it happily regurgitated Guinness and leprechans and all sorts of other shamrocks and shenanigans simply because I included the word "Ireland" in the instructions.
The upside of all this was, by experimenting with the software, I was able to discover exactly why so much content that my employer had been paying through the nose for from an an agency was similarly riddled with similar cliches, sterotypes and inaccuracies, as well as chunks that seemed to have been lifted from wikipedia wholesale. Clearly they were using similar technology to create massive silos of content without any editorial processes in place. And the results were disasterous.
So the lesson is this; GBT3 is a really clever and facinating technology, but one that's still in its infancy. And like any infant it requires constant attention, training and supervision. Use it, by all means, but not as a fully-fledged content creation platform but rather as a sketch pad for ideas. (Jarvis' AIDA feature, in particular, I found quite good for this.)
See it as just another item in the toolbox, a means but not an end. Anyone looking for a push-button content generator that will solve all their content problems are missing the point. That's unless you're an affiliate guy with a black hat fetish or a lazy content factory who just wants to quickly churn out blog post fodder and listicles, if that's all you want then it's the perfect product. Never again will you have to pay a human being in some distant land 0.0000001c per word to write masterpieces like "10 Great Gift Ideas For Your Labradoodle", you can do it at the touch of a button. But good luck getting it ranked on Google.
I'm currently using it for work where there's a need to scale up content output and, while skeptical to begin with, I do believe the technology can be used for simple things like bulk creation of short product descriptions, headings, titles, meta tags, etc. But for actual sales copy, I'm not convinced.
The technology is interesting, though, and it's getting better all the time. But it's also fundamentally flawed in various ways, for the exact same reason that we are. Big Tech want to sell us this crock that AI is something that thinks for itself but that's not true in the slightest. Essentially it's just a mirror for humanity in general, so GBT3 tools like Jarvis simply reflect back what we feed it. Hence its flaws; namely accuracy, originality, formality and unpredictability.
Accuracy: Since it's essentially grabbing bits and pieces of information of existing content to create a (generally coherent) mosiac of words, everything it writes needs to be carefully fact-checked in case it spews out something that's blatently false at best, or potentially libelous at worst.
This is exacerbated by the fact that, with Jarvis, the pool of content it's pulling from has not been updated since 2019 - and let's face it a LOT has happened since then.
Originality: Not only do you have to fact check it, plagiarism also rears its head quite a lot. It's stitching things together from various sources and usually just rephrasing them. And because it's all happening in some mystical ai algorithm we can never be sure of what those sources are. So in addition to them being potentially inaccurate there may be legal and/or duplicate content issues. At best you tend to get a lot of homoginised content that reads like every generic sales pitch, informercial script or blog post that's been churned out for the past decade.
Formality: This has a knock-on effect for anyone looking to create content for specific industries and/or markets, especially those outside the US. Setting it to UK English, for example, will alter the spelling and grammar accordingly, but it's not yet smart enough to know that certain phrases don't translate very well this side of the Atlantic.
Yes, you can set different TOVs on it but even when I've asked it to write in a formal tone, it continues to pump out content full of jaded CTAs, chirpy cliches and cutesy phrases - the kind of stuff that would make George Orwell vomit blood.
It's not always the most succint either. Which is anathema for us copywriters. We favour lean, impactful content that gets straight to the point, but poor ole Jarvis often likes to strap an onion to his belt and ramble on like Abraham Simpson. As for stuff like Technical Writing or if you're creating content for a heavily-regulated industry like Legal, Financial, Medical, Academic... forget about it.
If somebody can create software that does manage to clear that stumbling block I imagine there would be huge demand.
Unpredictability: All of these above issues are compounded by the fact that AI writing software is essentially creating context numerically, and assigning meaning based not on an intrinsic understanding of what these words and concepts mean, but rather on the statistical/mathematical relationship between them. So it still makes lots of obvious mistakes and often times runs off on weird tangents veer way off the original topic. You can feed it additional information for added context to stop it going off the rails but again it's unpredictable and when things go wrong it starts to either repeat itself at best, or starts pumping out absolute gibberish like zen haikus on acid.
Also, because it's a machine that draws in data from the internet, it's also culturally tone deaf, just like the internet. So when I tried to get it to create a test article on the upcoming World Cup this year, it started ranting about (the host nation) Qatar's human rights record and when asking it to create a product description for the Irish market, it happily regurgitated Guinness and leprechans and all sorts of other shamrocks and shenanigans simply because I included the word "Ireland" in the instructions.
The upside of all this was, by experimenting with the software, I was able to discover exactly why so much content that my employer had been paying through the nose for from an an agency was similarly riddled with similar cliches, sterotypes and inaccuracies, as well as chunks that seemed to have been lifted from wikipedia wholesale. Clearly they were using similar technology to create massive silos of content without any editorial processes in place. And the results were disasterous.
So the lesson is this; GBT3 is a really clever and facinating technology, but one that's still in its infancy. And like any infant it requires constant attention, training and supervision. Use it, by all means, but not as a fully-fledged content creation platform but rather as a sketch pad for ideas. (Jarvis' AIDA feature, in particular, I found quite good for this.)
See it as just another item in the toolbox, a means but not an end. Anyone looking for a push-button content generator that will solve all their content problems are missing the point. That's unless you're an affiliate guy with a black hat fetish or a lazy content factory who just wants to quickly churn out blog post fodder and listicles, if that's all you want then it's the perfect product. Never again will you have to pay a human being in some distant land 0.0000001c per word to write masterpieces like "10 Great Gift Ideas For Your Labradoodle", you can do it at the touch of a button. But good luck getting it ranked on Google.
- SARubin
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Re: Anybody tried AI Tools?
I like your writing Scribla. This post was a lot of fun to read.
It's entertaining, informative, and well thought out... All at the same time.
In an internet ocean teeming with bland and/or nonsensical bullshit, I find it refreshing when someone can make an intelligent point without sounding like Ben Stein in "Ferris Bueller's Day Off".
And any who can mention George Orwell and Grampa Simpson in the same post... and make it work... is OK in my book.
It's entertaining, informative, and well thought out... All at the same time.
In an internet ocean teeming with bland and/or nonsensical bullshit, I find it refreshing when someone can make an intelligent point without sounding like Ben Stein in "Ferris Bueller's Day Off".
And any who can mention George Orwell and Grampa Simpson in the same post... and make it work... is OK in my book.
A good marketer knows how to think like a marketer - A great marketer learns how to think like the customer...
SARubin - Direct Response Copywriter / Conversion Flow Expert
SARubin - Direct Response Copywriter / Conversion Flow Expert
Re: Anybody tried AI Tools?
Thanks for the kind words. And anyone who drops Ben Stein and Ferris Buller in a reply is alright in my book too.
Re: Anybody tried AI Tools?
I'm not sure how much this opinion is worth coming from a newb but personally, it feels like learning/playing the guitar on Guitar Hero.
The biggest advantage for me was saving time, have something whip up really quickly based on a set of requirements and voila! An article that you can run through and polish up.
But as I have mentioned, I'm fairly new to the writing world and AI writing apps ain't exactly gonna make me a better writer, no more than Guitar Hero turning me into a great guitar shredder.
So I've stopped and continued on the long hard route.
The biggest advantage for me was saving time, have something whip up really quickly based on a set of requirements and voila! An article that you can run through and polish up.
But as I have mentioned, I'm fairly new to the writing world and AI writing apps ain't exactly gonna make me a better writer, no more than Guitar Hero turning me into a great guitar shredder.
So I've stopped and continued on the long hard route.
- Franklin
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Re: Anybody tried AI Tools?
They're getting better by the day.
I believe in a few years we'll have some real competition from those robots.
But like all computers they're only as good as the person who programs it, and quality writing still takes quality market research.
I believe in a few years we'll have some real competition from those robots.
But like all computers they're only as good as the person who programs it, and quality writing still takes quality market research.
“There are 3 kinds of people in this world. Those who can count, and those who can't”
- rickbeaver
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Re: Anybody tried AI Tools?
Yes, I've experimented with various AI tools for everyday tasks. While some show promise, like MyEssayWriter.ai, I've found that manual editing is often necessary for optimal results. Nonetheless, these tools do offer significant time-saving benefits.
Re: Anybody tried AI Tools?
I've included a couple of AI tools in my routine, namely Quillbot and Kafkai. Both have been pretty handy.
Quillbot is good at paraphrasing and restructuring text, which is a huge time-saver for me.
Kafkai is great for generating initial drafts or outlines, especially for content-heavy projects like articles or reports.
Their price per month, along with the features and the prices of other AI tools, is covered in this list.
Quillbot is good at paraphrasing and restructuring text, which is a huge time-saver for me.
Kafkai is great for generating initial drafts or outlines, especially for content-heavy projects like articles or reports.
Their price per month, along with the features and the prices of other AI tools, is covered in this list.
Re: Anybody tried AI Tools?
Indeed many tools powered by AI exist. People use them for various needs. Tools run the gamut. Some provide language interpretation others deal with chat services. The functions extend to those that are more intricate. Tasks like recognizing images and processing natural language are also handled by AI.
You might have experimented with any particular AI tools. Otherwise, ponder on exploring some. It could be valuable for a specific purpose. You might have an interest or could curate an interest.
You might have experimented with any particular AI tools. Otherwise, ponder on exploring some. It could be valuable for a specific purpose. You might have an interest or could curate an interest.
Re: Anybody tried AI Tools?
Artificial Intelligence (AI) implements rapidly reshaped industries. It automates tasks. It enhances decision-making processes. It also encourages innovation. Examples of these tools are ChatGPT and texthumanizer.ai. They're knocking out a paradigm of how companies' function. They also redefine creative professionals' work.
ChatGPT mirrors AI's efficiency in customer service. It provides instantaneous responses. This reduces waiting time. It elevates customer contentment. texthumanizer.ai injects natural, human-like essence into written words. It improves understandability. It ramps up engagement in marketing assets in educational content, and on other platforms too.
ChatGPT mirrors AI's efficiency in customer service. It provides instantaneous responses. This reduces waiting time. It elevates customer contentment. texthumanizer.ai injects natural, human-like essence into written words. It improves understandability. It ramps up engagement in marketing assets in educational content, and on other platforms too.
- jaycomposerharp
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Re: Anybody tried AI Tools?
They’re pretty handy, but yeah, they often need a bit of manual tweaking. Still, they do save a ton of time! I’ve tried tools like Grammarly for writing and Notion AI for organizing tasks.
- jaycomposerharp
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Re: Anybody tried AI Tools?
I’ve dived into a bunch of AI tools myself. For content creation, tools like Grammarly and Jasper have been lifesavers, though they still need some manual tweaking to get everything just right. For project management, I’ve found tools like Asana and Trello with AI integrations really streamline the workflow.
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