Chat GPT for e scouting

I'm a new deer hunter. I'll be using my custom rifle I built (not new to shooting). I think AI will be the downfall of society. I love the idea of making my first hint easy, but I will pass on the AI thing for my first and likely every hunt after
 
I take the chat thing with a grain of salt. I tried it out because people were raving about how awesome it was. I asked it some reloading questions. According to chat it said that the current bullet I shoot absolutely will not stabilize in a certain twist barrel. Well that bullet in fact does in my gun and a lot of other rifles that other people have. Small stupid example but it is just to show don’t take everything it says as gospel.

I also think the AI stuff is just regurgitated info that is already online somewhere
 
I take the chat thing with a grain of salt. I tried it out because people were raving about how awesome it was. I asked it some reloading questions. According to chat it said that the current bullet I shoot absolutely will not stabilize in a certain twist barrel. Well that bullet in fact does in my gun and a lot of other rifles that other people have. Small stupid example but it is just to show don’t take everything it says as gospel.

I also think the AI stuff is just regurgitated info that is already online somewhere
The thing with ChatGPT, in it's current form, is that it will get MOST technical things right, but what it does get wrong it will present to you with absolute full confidence.

I've even leaned into wrong answers I spotted to see how long it will hold it's confidence and it will really screw you over if you can't filter the data. Once you call it out it always gives some silly ego stroking answer like "Very astute observation, and you're totally right for calling me out on that."
 
gohunt or onX will have an “ai layer” within the next year.


I use the most powerful AI to help me with analytics at my day job and it sucks. So I wouldn’t get too excited yet.
 
"Delete this" is a cop-out. While most of us would never consider it as a tool much less admit to using it, like it or not it's here. A purist would shudder at the the thought but others are more open minded. The way I see it you can either debate the effectiveness and ethics or ignore the post.

As proponents of ethical hunting I believe there is a responsibility to address new technologies and trends. Should it be allowed? Is it ethical? Does it provide unfair advantage? Should you shunned like a 6.5 manbun aficionado?
 
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