There's definitely a threshold where it starts being too creative and becomes a waste of time, bc I have to 1. read what it suggests, 2. realize how it differs from what I mean to say, 3. context-switch back to what I'm trying to say. The less it tries to do, the more time saved.
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I suspect this will generally hold true of other applications of predictive text completion/generation. Don't make me read someone else's writing, don't make me analyze someone else's decisions, just complete my current (obvious) action.
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Until AI is good enough that you'd trust it to make autonomous decisions (e.g. write your emails in your place), it should focus on pure automation. Which can't be more than one step ahead.
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And when AI gets good enough that it can make autonomous decisions, of course, you'll have other things to worry about.
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I agree. I disabled the predictive text in Outlook this week for exactly this reason
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And... Lose that 1min on Twitter easily
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30s-1min per day. wow what about google paying taxes?....
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My favorite part is when it autocompletes names, no more awkward typos
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I find more useful when replying to a mail than composing a fresh one.
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It's good at detecting tired and worn out phrases. When it suggests something that I was going to write, I feel compelled to rephrase.
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