@@engineeringofawesome I read them, they were more useful prior to ChatGPT. It's a super useful tool to screen out people who can't use tools at their disposal, like spellcheck. Also, gives you a bit of insight into the level of English a candidate speaks. If we're talking about deep technical concepts, a certain amount of language profiency is required, after all. Also, it's just nice to get people who read the job ad. With ChatGPT, none of these points persist, so, yay.
Yeah because it's free, so most people are using that version. Another video is coming soon with more recent versions and some other popular LLMs. Stay tuned!
@@engineeringofawesome Gpt-4o has a free tier, this is what your prompt got me: With a robust 10-year journey in software development, I have honed my expertise in modern web technologies such as JavaScript, TypeScript, React, Node.js, HTML, CSS, AWS, GCP, and Docker. I am not just a developer; I am a creator of seamless digital experiences that prioritize customer value. My forte is thriving in agile teams, where innovation and efficiency intersect to deliver exceptional results. Let’s transform challenges into opportunities together.
Ah OK, I didn't realise the latest version was free as well. In the next video I'm going to compare several different LLMs and versions, so hopefully that will be more conclusive!
Your right if you feed it an extremely rough draft that just covers the crude basics then give it a prompt to work through it with you paragraph by paragraph you get a much better result. Ive found using it iteratively in colaberation produces the same document in an hour that would of taken me all day to write on my own.
We were just having this discussion today! The worst is when you get a cover letter that ChatGPT generates using your job advertisement as a prompt 😂
Wow, I never bother to read cover letters, but ChatGPT cover letters, straight to the bin!
@@engineeringofawesome I read them, they were more useful prior to ChatGPT. It's a super useful tool to screen out people who can't use tools at their disposal, like spellcheck. Also, gives you a bit of insight into the level of English a candidate speaks. If we're talking about deep technical concepts, a certain amount of language profiency is required, after all.
Also, it's just nice to get people who read the job ad.
With ChatGPT, none of these points persist, so, yay.
Dude, you are using the oldest version available through the UI to proof your point...
Yeah because it's free, so most people are using that version. Another video is coming soon with more recent versions and some other popular LLMs. Stay tuned!
@@engineeringofawesome Gpt-4o has a free tier, this is what your prompt got me: With a robust 10-year journey in software development, I have honed my expertise in modern web technologies such as JavaScript, TypeScript, React, Node.js, HTML, CSS, AWS, GCP, and Docker. I am not just a developer; I am a creator of seamless digital experiences that prioritize customer value. My forte is thriving in agile teams, where innovation and efficiency intersect to deliver exceptional results. Let’s transform challenges into opportunities together.
@@engineeringofawesome 4o is free too, up to a certain amount.
Ah OK, I didn't realise the latest version was free as well. In the next video I'm going to compare several different LLMs and versions, so hopefully that will be more conclusive!
Your right if you feed it an extremely rough draft that just covers the crude basics then give it a prompt to work through it with you paragraph by paragraph you get a much better result.
Ive found using it iteratively in colaberation produces the same document in an hour that would of taken me all day to write on my own.