Hello,

I plan to fish tridelphia revisor in Maryland this Friday on a kayak. I used ChatGPT to create a plan for me based on the time of day and the two lures I plan to fish ewitj which will be a nedrig for bass and a white rooster tail for any species. It seems like a good plan but I’m obviously a novice so would appreciate any guidance here.

**I told ChatGPT I will arrive between 3-4 pm and plan to fish for 3 hours. It’s not a 1 hour trip**

Posted by Legitimate_Order_305

4 Comments

  1. JooseTheGuice on

    Chat GPT and other AI engines are incapable of giving consistently accurate info.

    Please just use your own head and talk to other anglers in the area!

  2. Jesus. You made this for a 1 hour fishing trip? You’re going to spend as much time checking on what bullet point to do next as you are going to spend fishing

    Edit for correction: The 3-4pm timeline isnt even accurate because the outline extends well towards 6pm. Either way, this is about as much of a crap shoot as throwing a dart at the map and hoping it lands on a honey hole.

    Also just noticed the purple step has you launching a jump over the dam lmao. Also the arrows on all the lines are fucked lol.

  3. Illustrious_Crab3733 on

    LLMs do not really *know* things, they are basically really advanced text predictors. Based on my admittedly simple understanding, yhey first and foremost are making sentences that sound and read correctly. That often times will not necessarily produce factual information, though circumstantially it may. Basically, you are just as likely to get information that is totally incorrect, partially incorrect, or irrelevant as you are to get information that is helpful. Essentially, I think relying on chatgpt for fishing plans is likely to hinder your actual learning and understanding of how to successfully catch fish and plan your trips.

    Edit: a few words

  4. michaericalribo on

    Getting out the popcorn to watch the AI-afraid criticize you.

    For next time, you’re asking ChatGPT to do too much. Don’t have it draw pictures, don’t have it give you very specific advice for a particular location unless you give it a summary of the weather forecast and a picture of a depth chart. Think of answering your question as requiring a sequence of “thinking” tasks: what is the res they’re referring too? Where is it? What’s the weather usually like this time of year? Etc. If you can do any of that “thinking” for it, you’ll improve the results. Giving it more real world information and data is the best approach to increase the accuracy and usefulness of the output.

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