As far as the 'hilight what it changed' there are sites for that. If you take a copy of the text before it changed, and after it changed, and put them both up on one of these sites, it will dutifully highlit all of the changes.
There is another value in this, namely that if you do that, you can read both copies and decide on yet a third idea that is even better than both.
If your point is that ChatGPT has some real deficits, then, yes.
If your goal is to have the best writing possible, then having ChatGPT go over your text and then comparing the changes seems like it would be helpful.
I often get in trouble because I LOVE rewriting people's stuff... and they tend to hate it :) But I love for people to rewrite my stuff as well.
Let's put it this way. If you're testing a tool, and the tool usually does a reasonable facsimile of what you want (and uses up resources that you didn't want to spend right at that moment), but sometimes does a large task that you didn't ask it to do, and other times does not do a task that should easily be within its reach, while claiming it is doing it. When you go to report back on how it did, what should you say?
As far as the 'hilight what it changed' there are sites for that. If you take a copy of the text before it changed, and after it changed, and put them both up on one of these sites, it will dutifully highlit all of the changes.
There is another value in this, namely that if you do that, you can read both copies and decide on yet a third idea that is even better than both.
I know Word can do that. But that's not the point.
If your point is that ChatGPT has some real deficits, then, yes.
If your goal is to have the best writing possible, then having ChatGPT go over your text and then comparing the changes seems like it would be helpful.
I often get in trouble because I LOVE rewriting people's stuff... and they tend to hate it :) But I love for people to rewrite my stuff as well.
Let's put it this way. If you're testing a tool, and the tool usually does a reasonable facsimile of what you want (and uses up resources that you didn't want to spend right at that moment), but sometimes does a large task that you didn't ask it to do, and other times does not do a task that should easily be within its reach, while claiming it is doing it. When you go to report back on how it did, what should you say?
This is pretty much identical to my experiences with ChatGPT. It certainly has its uses, but as you say, don't trust it.
When you catch Copilot in an error it cops an attitude with you. Chat GPT is worse. It *agrees* with you.
Sass from an AI 😂