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Back in the times of GPT3 text completion, right before the API came out, a contemporary art museum asked me to collaborate on a project. The project was supposed to include a chatbot, and I was like okay I can probably hook something up.

Then I remembered the "text completion LLM thingy" I saw on HN, and tried it out in the playground. Once I gave it an IRC style example of a conversation to complete, I was like hm, this could work. Then I figured out I could "sort" people into different groups based on personality using the same text completion engine and some answers they provided. Then I noticed I could have it provide me with JSON directly.

That's when I realized how big this could be for code and data analysis - even tried to convince an at the time cofounder to pivot into AI coding, but to no avail.

Once the API was released and the art project chatbot got launched (and the theater show associated with it, which even won some awards), people who used it loved the chatbot, got into heated arguments with it, tried to teach it things, talked about their lives and were sad when it didnt remember something.

That was when I understood the social impact this could have on people - they really behave like its a person on the other side. They show interest, think it displays emotion, try to entertain it, be polite, ask about its thoughts and hopes and dreams. And even when they knew they were talking to a machine, they were still trying to be friends and make it happy, which was quite beautiful to see.

Later on, I had a third oh shit moment - once the 3.5 API was out and about, I prototyped a Rust code generation harness for a client, akin to a primitive claude code. That was the "I'm getting a bit worried" oh shit moment, and it caused a lot of reflection and thinking about the future. And I happily welcome it.

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I also remember doing this. Chats, first parts of books, title pages and all, just to give it a chance of saying something in the ballpark of what I was looking for. I remember very vividly that chats or books by Linus Torvalds would be more technically accurate that say Lincoln. It's obvious of course, but I found it really enlightening. It could code a bit actually, not great, but well enough to push me into an existential crisis. I started doing a master to re-educate myself because I could see "interesting" times coming.

I actually emailed OpenAI back then saying they should be careful because this is much greater than the public or even they themselves think. They actually replied! They thought it was cool, but very limited and I shouldn't be too impressed. Good times.




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