The Official ChatGTP cheat code thread.

bnew

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1/2
@colin_fraser
At what point should it be reasonable to expect coherent answers to these? How far beyond PhD-level reasoning must we climb?



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2/2
@mommi84
o3 with a simple addition to the prompt solved it. Integrated neurosymbolic reasoning is what these models need.



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To post tweets in this format, more info here: https://www.thecoli.com/threads/tips-and-tricks-for-posting-the-coli-megathread.984734/post-52211196


a symbolic reasoning prompt:

Extract each piece of information and convert it to a logical form. Then, analyse the graph and answer the question.




Why Symbolic?​


  • “Convert it to a logical form”: This means representing information in a structured, rule-based, or symbolic way—such as logical statements, predicates, if-then rules, or formal language. This is characteristic of symbolic (as opposed to statistical or subsymbolic) AI reasoning.
  • Analysis and Answering: Once in symbolic/logical form, manipulation and reasoning are done via logical rules, deduction, or inference—core aspects of symbolic AI.

Symbolic methods are contrasted with:


  • Statistical/subsymbolic approaches (like neural networks), which rely on patterns in data, probabilities, embeddings, or numbers, rather than explicit symbols and logic.

Typical Symbolic Representations:​


  • Propositional logic (e.g., A → B)
  • Predicate logic (e.g., isStudent(x))
  • Rule-based systems (e.g., IF ..., THEN ...)
  • Fact lists and ontologies
 

bnew

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Commented on Mon Apr 21 12:14:21 2025 UTC

I hate it but also I believe avoiding it will result in becoming the equivalent of "I'm just not a computer person" boomers in 5-10 years. So I'm learning how to use it anyways.


│ Commented on Mon Apr 21 19:35:54 2025 UTC

│ Yep, I always like referencing https://jerz.setonhill.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/20120727-214334-e1357197289684.jpg with regard to AI. People complain about AI being junk, but it's just a tool. Any tool that is wielded carelessly will not work well. If you formulate your requests in a good manner then you will get good results. Not perfect results, mind you, but good enough to get you near the finish line so that you can carry things the rest of the way.
20120727-214334-e1357197289684.jpg

 

bnew

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Commented on Mon Apr 21 12:14:21 2025 UTC

I hate it but also I believe avoiding it will result in becoming the equivalent of "I'm just not a computer person" boomers in 5-10 years. So I'm learning how to use it anyways.


│ Commented on Mon Apr 21 16:15:39 2025 UTC

│ It's more than that tbh, that's one key but there's a few:

│ Know your use cases

│ Understand the importance of human on the loop

│ Understand writing good prompts (DICE framework)

│ Understand when to use different types of models like reasoning vs general/omni.

│ Understand weaknesses, such as when asking for critique most models will be overly optimistic and positive, so it's important to tell them clearly not to be.

│ Understand when deep research models can be useful.

│ Then probably more relevant for developers specifically but they should understand how to build with AI, how to build and use MCP servers, how to use agentic frameworks.

│ Then if you really want to make the most out of them understand temperature and topP and when these should be adjusted.

│ People who are just straight saying oh I don't need AI are absolutely the modern day boomers who didn't feel they needed computers.

│ They will be left behind.
 

bnew

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Vibe Coding Complete Tutorial and Tips - Cursor / Windsurf


https://id.420129.xyz/watch?v=v7UcVPO4y3c

Channel Info Matthew Berman
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Timestamps:
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4:52 Making a Plan
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17:14 Vibe Coding Workflow
22:18 Chat vs Write Mode
22:41 Model Selection
22:52 Front End Templates
22:33 Getting Better Results
23:51 Three.js Library
24:17 Security
27:45 MCP Servers

Links:
gist.github.com/mberman84/98fa7d02a2d4c11071bf2bf6…
x.com/jackfriks/status/1902686165158805839
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x.com/cj_zzzz/status/1902386647549014303?s=46
x.com/bilawalsidhu/status/1902361696611475804
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[📚 Educational Purpose Only] This Is Literally the Only AI Cheatsheet You Need for 2025! 🚀


Posted on Thu May 1 01:16:32 2025 UTC

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If you want to master AI in 2025, this single cheatsheet has you covered! From AGI and LLMs to Prompt Engineering and RAG, every crucial term is broken down in plain English. Whether you’re a beginner or deep into AI, bookmark this—because knowing these 38 terms will make you sound like a pro in any AI conversation. Which term did you just learn for the first time? Let’s discuss!
 

bnew

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Commented on Thu May 1 02:35:26 2025 UTC

Yeah my ideation rate has sky rocked since GPT. Realisation has done so too.


│ Commented on Thu May 1 14:46:31 2025 UTC

│ how do you get AI to generate unique ideas?

│ │
│ │
│ │ Commented on Thu May 1 16:02:47 2025 UTC
│ │
│ │ Feed Gemini 2.5 Pro like 25 research papers in pdf format on a topic that interests you, then start chatting with it on them. Brainstorm with it. Ask it to throw around novel ideas that pull inspiration from other fields of science.
│ │
│ │ Alternatively, feed it like 14 research papers on one subject, then 14 papers on another subject, if you already know what two subjects you want to find some synergy between or such. Then ask Gemini to find connections or novel insights between the two subjects that could be turned into a publishable paper.
│ │
│ │ You can combine these two approaches. First, start with the first approach, then when it suggests another field to combine with your first theme, go find research papers on the second theme it suggests to help fill in the context to give it more data.
│ │
│ │ You'll have to eventually start a new convo, maybe around 400,000 or 500,000 tokens being used up, but you should be able to narrow down what specific papers Gemini wants to use for its idea- make it write a bibliography and make a note to put those papers aside. Then make it write up a detailed summary of the idea for the paper you want it to write with references to the research papers. Maybe make it write a rough draft of the Abstract too.
│ │
│ │ Then make a new convo. Tell Gemini in the new convo that you have a rough idea for a research paper, you have an Abstract, a rough summary of the paper with references, and your bibliography, then supply all that and the research papers as context to Gemini.
│ │
│ │ Gemini should now be able to write you a fairly decent rough draft of a research paper with references to the research papers you've provided to it for context.
│ │
│ │ Now- whether this paper will actually be publishable as is- I cannot say. Probably not. Currently, using AI to help write papers must be listed in the Acknowledgments section of your paper. Know that, first of all. Research papers also tend to require empirical results of experiments to be published by the usual places. However, releasing your paper to the open source community can always be helpful, and that doesn't require anyone's approval.
│ │
│ │ If you'd like to see an example: Here's Research-Proposals/Context-Aggregated Linear Attention.pdf at main · Mmorgan-ML/Research-Proposals
│ │
│ │ You can do much more with Gemini, such as doing coding projects, of course. I'm about to release a github repo of an open source novel LLM architecture I vibe coded with Gemini. It'll come complete with a paper that describes the architecture and a training script so people can train models on their computers.
│ │
 
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