Comment by charcircuit
5 hours ago
>If we wanted to know what Claude thought, we’d ask him.
You would be surprised how many people don't do this. It's very common for people to ask others questions that could be easily googled or clauded.
5 hours ago
>If we wanted to know what Claude thought, we’d ask him.
You would be surprised how many people don't do this. It's very common for people to ask others questions that could be easily googled or clauded.
> It's very common for people to ask others questions that could be easily googled or clauded.
I'll admit I do this, asking people questions that could be answered by Google, and sometimes even if I know the answer myself, sometimes to make conversation, sometimes because I want to hear the person's perspective on it.
If I'd never ask questions I could find the answers to myself in some other way, I think I'd never ask any person any question, which sounds kind of boring.
It's very boring. I've been carrying around a flip phone recently so I can ask people dumb questions again. No excuse to ask anyone for the time, though. I miss that.
This is true but seems to be orthogonal to the post you replied to. At a further tangent, I encounter people saying "well it's on Google" as they seem to think Google has some authority or quality threshold.
What an absolutely awful take. Asking people questions, even if it’s less efficient or has the chance to be misleading, is the absolute number one way to a) learn, and b) make connection. Even if you’re just asking a stranger the time, you don’t know what you might learn.
Except that nowadays it feels more like people asking you for the time every 2 minutes while standing just in front of Big Ben.
I see it everyday on forums/Discord servers where some users will treat you like their personal search engine simply because they are too lazy to spend 10s reading the results themselves.
Big Ben, the bell?
1 reply →
Are you trying to minimize human interaction?