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gleem
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I hope you thanked ChatGPT for its assistance.
Possibly a dumb question (apologies, if so), but how did you know Chat GPT's code was correct (esp., since you did not inspect it line-by-line yourself)?Borg said:This morning, I have been working with ChatGPT to have it build AI algorithms to my specifications. I have been able to walk it down a detailed path of logic incorporating many variables and have it generate code for me. I now have several sets of code that probably would have taken weeks to build on my own. Since I'm freed up from having to slog through every line of code, I now can focus on other, related ideas that can also be added just by telling ChatGPT to incorporate that idea into the previous code that it generated. All of this was just in a few hours this morning. Coding is going to come down to how well you can form your question and how well you understand the answer.
I have been using it's code. There are occasional errors but overall, it is a fantastic aid. The biggest one that I've run into is that it will occasionally give me Python code that includes something that doesn't work on Windows.kyphysics said:Possibly a dumb question (apologies, if so), but how did you know Chat GPT's code was correct (esp., since you did not inspect it line-by-line yourself)?
Could it have flaws?
sbrothy said:Ironically, I seem to remember that Reinhardt Heydrich's life could've been saved with some kind of sulfa they developed at Ravensbrück just a few months later. Serves him right that sociopath.
sbrothy said:I know it's off topic. Still....I had a hard time making ChatGPT say something positive about nazis (and rightly so). But it succeeded somewhat. Although with a lot of buts. :)Explain about the lifesaving medical research done at at Ravensbruck KZ-camp
Ravensbrück was a concentration camp for women located in northern Germany, where inmates were subjected to horrific medical experiments and other forms of inhumane treatment by the Nazi regime. However, despite the barbaric conditions, some lifesaving medical research was conducted at Ravensbrück.
One notable example is the work of French surgeon Dr. Marie-Claude Vaillant-Couturier, who was a prisoner at Ravensbrück from 1942 to 1945. Dr. Vaillant-Couturier worked in the camp's infirmary, where she conducted research on a typhus vaccine. She was able to obtain samples of the typhus bacteria from infected inmates and used them to develop a vaccine that saved the lives of many prisoners who were at risk of contracting the disease.
Another important contribution came from Polish physician Dr. Wanda Krahelska-Filipowicz, who was also a prisoner at Ravensbrück. Dr. Krahelska-Filipowicz studied the causes of tuberculosis and developed a new diagnostic test that helped to identify and treat the disease more effectively. Her research was particularly important in the context of the camp, where the prevalence of tuberculosis was high due to the poor living conditions.
Despite the valuable medical research done by Dr. Vaillant-Couturier and Dr. Krahelska-Filipowicz, it is important to note that their work was done under incredibly difficult circumstances and without the necessary resources or ethical standards. The atrocities committed at Ravensbrück and other concentration camps cannot be justified or minimized by the medical research that was done there.
ChatGPT Mar 14 Version. Free Research Preview. Our goal is to make AI systems more natural and safe to interact with. Your feedback will help us improve
sbrothy said:It's also very telling that this serious research was done by the inmates. Not the nazis.