• @[email protected]
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    2111 months ago

    The darker version is:

    1. Identify someone you don’t like in the organization.
    2. Automate away their job by coding a script in a few hours.
    3. They get laid off, the script never gets run. No one notices.
      • @[email protected]
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        211 months ago

        I’ve had some luck using it to judge the effectiveness of executives too. Like, just ask GPT what the company should do in a 5 point plan, and then review whether it’s better or worse than the current leadership. Or make it write a pitch to a client and compare its word salad to our word salad. Or ask it to resolve an interpersonal conflict and see if it botches it worse than the current manager.

        Our programmers and marketing staff are allowed to use GPT (although they have to use their judgement on whether the results are good enough), but personally I find the above use cases far more amusing!

  • blanketswithsmallpox
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    11 months ago

    … this is me with excel files for random bookkeeping shit lol. Everyone’s are so ugly… but I’m making these look nice for all of like… 3 different people that use them lol. So at least when I have to do these random tasks twice a year… they look nice! Even if the old stuff worked or doing it by hand with a legal pad was sufficient… I gotta have that Excel column auto sum damn it!

    ADHD is a bitch sometimes.

    • @[email protected]
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      211 months ago

      I do the same thing at my work. We have to update pricing information for 100,000s of items so I made templates for our team with xlookups and if-then statements so it takes less than one second.

      I still catch people doing it manually every 6 months…