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00:00
and then no one has to wonder if people are talking about human quarters or Special Company Quarters.
Also: winter is mostly during Q1! The new (start) date is still during the winter, though it ends in spring.
Q1 through Q4 are generally interpreted by context. Usually, unless someone has already been talking about fiscal years, then Q1, etc. are assumed to be calendar years. The vast majority of people are going to assume that Q1, etc. are calendar based, unless otherwise stated.
though I do concede that they are in fact doing them at the start of each season. The previous two were in fact at the start of summer and fall.
@RyanM There is a small chance that someone is a huge nerd and did this intentionally, in which case, great job, I honestly love it.
 
4 hours later…
04:01
I think the most maddening thing about Stack Exchange's attempts to shoehorn AI into their products is that there really are plenty of viable use cases for it, just ... not the ones they're trying.
3
I should've just had ChatGPT write that post for me /s. Would've saved me a bunch of time.
(I disagree that its third point is a real issue, but c'mon, I spent, like, 5 minutes writing the prompt and iterating on it exactly once, and the rest are spot on and cover every issue I spotted. Surely their AI Professionals can do a better job than me spending 5 minutes on my commute home.)
 
2 hours later…
05:50
@RyanM Mostly during Q1... in the Northern hemisphere.
 
3 hours later…
08:47
@AbdulAzizBarkat yeah I was following the post, so I saw that rollback and though "huh."
@RyanM I think detecting NAA and pushing to the review queue based on that would be interesting to try
they already have a bunch of historical data
09:18
@Makyen Yes, it's almost as if that's why a standard abbreviation should exist that indicates clearly one is talking about a fiscal year. It could be an initialism, like "FY", that is prepended to the year. For example, "FY2025". Then, it would be unambiguous. Too bad that doesn't exist so that they could have used it on that post's title.
@RyanM In this example situation, sure, that's a reasonable response. But, in the abstract, what's the difference between that and using ChatGPT to review Stack Overflow questions before being posted and make suggestions on how to improve them? I definitely don't want the latter.
@starball Ooohh, so close! What you're thinking of is, in fact, AI, but not generative AI, so Stack Overflow, Inc. is not at all interested.
@CodyGray >>>>>>:(
Are those supposed to be dunce caps? You're wearing them upside down.
@CodyGray >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>:(
those are my upside down dunce caps. stop making more grow
Pinocchio?
somebody make a picture of the chatgpt logo with a long nose. *summoning zoe
09:53
💩>
2
 
5 hours later…
15:21
@starball You rang?
🚽
@CodyGray hey when did you start working for Tesla's PR department
@RyanM just... use the month I guess though it's an American company and the overwhelming majority of traffic is from the northern hemisphere so using "Winter" is probably not that big of an issue.
15:38
Took me a hot minute to gaslight chatgpt into giving me something, but
user image
3
 
1 hour later…
17:02
@Zoe-Savethedatadump no, I starball
 
2 hours later…
19:14
19:50
@RyanM Yeah, that's a frustrating thing about the AI bubble in general. There are useful use-cases for LLMs! But most companies trying to use "AI" into their product are advertising solutions in search of a problem, rather than solving a real problem.
20:07
what would be a great example of a real problem being solved by an LLM
Stack Overflow is actually a really good example. Stack Overflow had a bunch of problems, so they implemented LLMs, and are now about to disappear into corporate insignificance
No more site, no more problems

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