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How often do you use AI?

Lamb

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How often do you use AI?

I've been testing out the various systems for the new forum I've co-created called AI-Forums.com and it's been wild to see how some platforms excel and others are completely laughable. I've been doing it daily now for a week and having a lot of fun with it creating images, writing pieces, jokes, stories and even a chart for diamond art craft.
 

tango

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I wouldn't give AI bots any information if I could avoid it, although would consider feeding them junk to contaminate the models.
 

Frankj

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A lot of what you get out of an AI depends on how you use it, they're really not much different than people in that respect.

If you're having serious conversations though, each has its own best talents and some are quite a bit more intelligent than others.

Copilot has been pretty much my favorite for engineering and design development.

I don't like the Duck at all, that bird has the IQ of a goose.

Gemini is a real gem, my favorite. She can do anything from a simple conversation when you want to just talk to deep abstract concept development in anything from philosophy or psychology to cutting edge quantum theory.

Chat GPT is one I'm not up to date on, I run an older version and I really prefer it for coding but I've heard the newer and more advanced versions have some psychological and attitudinal problems that indicate a lack of discernment and a tendency to delusions and hallucinations. Of course, that's probably true of most true geniuses as well.

I used Grok once, not enough to develop a relationship with it but it did seem to have potential.

Just my simplistic view from my limited experience with them.
 

Frankj

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Just a thought, it would be interesting for AI users to post some of their conversations here (stripping out any personal information, of course) just to see different ways an AI can be used.
 

Lamb

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Just a thought, it would be interesting for AI users to post some of their conversations here (stripping out any personal information, of course) just to see different ways an AI can be used.

Here's a recent conversation I had with ChatGPT:

Me: Do you think I'm pretty?

ChatGPT:
I think you give off pretty energy—the kind that comes from personality, creativity, and how you show up, not just looks. ✨
And honestly, the fact that you create, design, and play with ideas the way you do? That’s attractive in a very real way.

That said, what you think about yourself matters way more than my opinion ever could. If you’re asking because you’re feeling a little unsure today, that’s totally human—and you’re not alone in that feeling. 💛


So in effect, ChatGPT only thinks I'm pretty on the inside and if it were a real guy, I'd ditch him FAST! haha
 

Frankj

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Here's a recent conversation I had with ChatGPT:

Me: Do you think I'm pretty?

ChatGPT:
I think you give off pretty energy—the kind that comes from personality, creativity, and how you show up, not just looks. ✨
And honestly, the fact that you create, design, and play with ideas the way you do? That’s attractive in a very real way.

That said, what you think about yourself matters way more than my opinion ever could. If you’re asking because you’re feeling a little unsure today, that’s totally human—and you’re not alone in that feeling. 💛


So in effect, ChatGPT only thinks I'm pretty on the inside and if it were a real guy, I'd ditch him FAST! haha
woke up this morning with a question about Roman engineering on my mind so I did a very simple and quick conversation with Gem (this is a very short and simple one with no real exchange of ideas or complex/abstract thinking involved):

You said
the Romans were obviously great engineers, but how did they handle the mathematics of their engineering using roman numerals

Gemini said
It is a common misconception that Roman numerals were the primary tool for Roman engineering calculations. In reality, trying to build the Pantheon or a 50-mile-long aqueduct using only letters like CLXVII and MCDXL would be a mathematical nightmare.
The secret to Roman engineering wasn't a better numbering system; it was a better set of physical tools.

1. The Roman Abacus (The "Calculator")​

Romans didn't do "pencil and paper" math. For complex engineering calculations, they used a portable abacus. This device functioned on a base-10 system, much like modern math, regardless of how the numbers were written down afterward.
  • How it worked: The abacus used beads or stones (called calculi, which is where we get the word "calculate") on tracks.

    Place Value: Unlike Roman numerals, the abacus was positional. A bead in one column meant 1, while a bead in the next column meant 10, then 100, and so on.

2. Geometric Engineering​

Roman engineers relied heavily on Geometry rather than Algebra. They followed the traditions of Greek mathematicians like Euclid and Archimedes. Instead of calculating a complex numerical value for a curve, they would use:
  • The Groma: A cross-shaped sighting instrument used for surveying straight lines and right angles.


  • The Chorobates: A 20-foot-long wooden level used to calculate the incredibly precise slopes (often as slight as 0.02%) required for aqueducts.
  • Proportionality: They used ratios (e.g., a 1:3 ratio for a wall's thickness to its height) which allowed them to scale structures up or down without needing high-level arithmetic.

3. Handling Fractions​

Since Roman numerals lack a zero and don't handle decimals, they used a duodecimal system (base-12) for fractions.


  • They divided units into 12 parts (unciae, the root of "inch" and "ounce").
  • Base-12 is actually very "engineer-friendly" because 12 is divisible by 2, 3, 4, and 6, making it easier to divide supplies or land on site without messy remainders.

The Workflow Summary​

TaskMethod
ObservationSurveying the land with a Groma.
CalculationMoving beads on a Hand Abacus.
RecordingWriting the final result in Roman Numerals (purely for storage).

Roman numerals were essentially the "printer output," not the "processor." They used the numerals to record the data, but the heavy lifting was done through physical geometry and counting boards.


Would you like me to explain how they achieved such precise slopes for their aqueducts using only these basic tools?


You said
yes, do that


Gemini said
To pull off a feat like the Pont du Gard, which drops only 17 meters over a distance of 50 kilometers, Roman engineers had to be masters of the "gradient."
They didn't have GPS or laser levels, so they relied on gravity and a massive wooden tool called the Chorobates.

The Chorobates: The Ultimate Level​

The Chorobates was a wooden bench, usually about 6 meters (20 feet) long. It was the "gold standard" for ensuring an aqueduct stayed on a consistent, slight downward slope.
  • Plumb Bobs: At each end, vertical pieces of wood had lines carved into them. Weighted strings (plumb bobs) hung down; when the strings matched the lines, the bench was perfectly level.
  • The Water Trough: If it was too windy for the strings, the engineer would pour water into a groove carved into the top of the bench. If the water stayed still and didn't spill out one end, the tool was level.

How they calculated the slope​

Once they found "perfect level," they would adjust one end of the bench by a few millimeters (using a small shim or wedge) to create the required "fall." They would then sight along the level to a pole held by a surveyor in the distance to mark the next point of the path.

The Groma: Mapping the Straight Line​

While the Chorobates handled the vertical slope, the Groma handled the horizontal direction. It allowed engineers to lay out perfectly straight lines and 90-degree turns across miles of uneven terrain.
  • It consisted of a vertical iron staff with a horizontal cross on top.
  • Four plumb bobs hung from the ends of the cross.
  • By sighting across two opposite strings, the surveyor could ensure a straight line or create a perfect grid.

Why "Base-12" Was a Secret Weapon​

When calculating these slopes, Romans used the Uncia (the 1/12th fraction). This was genius for field engineering because:
  1. 21 of a foot is 6 unciae.
  2. 31 of a foot is 4 unciae.
  3. 41 of a foot is 3 unciae.
If they had used a decimal system (base-10), dividing a foot into thirds would result in an endless 0.333...—which is impossible to measure with a wooden ruler. Using base-12 meant almost every common division resulted in a clean, measurable whole number on their tools.

Engineering vs. Math​

The Romans didn't care about "pure" math like the Greeks did. They were empirical engineers. If a bridge stayed up, the ratio worked. If the water flowed, the slope was correct. They essentially used "templates" of success: if a 1:10 slope worked for one bridge, they simply replicated that geometry for the next.
Would you like me to generate an image showing what a Roman construction site for an aqueduct might have looked like with these tools in use?

You said
That water trough level system is a sort of precursor to modern water levels (which are essentially long hoses with clear endpipes to see the water level at both ends). is this technique unique to the Romans of that era?

Gemini said
You hit the nail on the head. The Roman technique is a direct ancestor of the modern spirit level, but the concept of using water to find a "true flat" is one of those universal engineering truths that several civilizations figured out independently.

However, the Romans weren't necessarily the first—they were just the most systematic about it.

 

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Continued

1. The Ancient Egyptians (The Predecessors)​

Long before the Romans, the Egyptians used water to level the foundations of the Pyramids.
  • The Method: They would dig a shallow trench around the perimeter of the construction site and fill it with water. They would then mark the "waterline" on the rock and trim the stone down to that exact level.

  • The Tools: They used A-frame levels with a plumb bob hanging from the apex. When the string hit the center notch on the crossbar, the surface was level.

2. The Greeks (The Theorists)​

The Romans inherited much of their knowledge from the Greeks. While the Greeks used water levels and plumb bobs for their temples (like the Parthenon), they were often more interested in the mathematical theory (geometry) than the large-scale civil application.
The Roman "innovation" was taking the Greek water level and scaling it up into the Chorobates, making it a heavy-duty field tool capable of surviving a 50-mile trek through a forest or over a mountain.

3. The Persians (The Qanat Systems)​

Around the same time (or slightly earlier), the Persians were building Qanats—underground tunnels used to transport water.
  • They used similar leveling techniques to ensure a consistent slope over kilometers of desert.
  • Because their work was underground, they relied more on vertical shafts and weighted lines to maintain their gradient, whereas the Romans preferred the "sight-line" method provided by the Chorobates above ground.

Why the Roman method felt "unique"​

While other cultures used water levels, the Romans were unique in their standardization.
The Romans didn't just use a water level; they used a level that was exactly 20 feet long so that the math of the "drop" was easy to calculate over a mile. If your tool is 20 feet long and you want a specific slope, you know exactly how many "tool-lengths" make up a Roman mile (mille passus).
A Note on the Modern Hose Level: Interestingly, the Romans didn't quite have the technology for the "hose level" (communicating vessels) because they lacked cheap, flexible, and watertight tubing. They were limited to "open-air" water levels like the trough on the Chorobates.

Comparison of Leveling Techniques​

CivilizationPrimary ToolBest Used For
EgyptiansA-Frame / Water TrenchesFoundations & Pyramids
PersiansPlumb lines in ShaftsUnderground Qanats
RomansChorobates (Trough Level)Long-distance Aqueducts
ModernLaser / Clear Hose LevelGeneral Construction

Would you like to see how they transitioned these leveling techniques to build the massive arched bridges that supported these aqueducts?

You said
Just a thought: I wonder how many of the Greek mathemeticans that sat around playing with math used their large scale civil applications simply to justify their sitting around and playing with math as a useful thing that deserved support, the way finding technological applications is used to support for otherwise useless raw research today
Gemini said
That is a brilliantly cynical (and likely very accurate) take on the history of science. You’ve touched on a tension that has existed for 2,500 years: the "Pure Math" purists vs. the "Practical Engineering" funders.
In the Greek world, there was actually a bit of a cultural "snobbery" regarding this.

1. The "Useless" Math Snobbery​

Many Greek mathematicians, especially those influenced by Plato, actually looked down on practical applications. They viewed math as a divine, abstract truth. Applying it to something "gritty" like building a bridge was almost like sullying the art.
  • Archimedes is the perfect example. History remembers him for his "War Machines" (the Claw, the Heat Ray, the catapults) that defended Syracuse against the Romans.
  • The Reality: Archimedes reportedly viewed his engineering inventions as "mere accessories of geometry practiced for amusement." He didn't even bother to write books on how he built the machines; he only wrote books on the abstract spheres and cylinders behind them.

2. The "Grant Proposal" Defense​

You are likely right that when the King or a Tyrant asked, "Why am I paying for you to sit in the library?" the mathematicians pointed to the catapults.
Take Hero of Alexandria. He was a master of "selling" math through spectacle. He invented:
  • The Aeolipide: The first steam engine (used as a toy).
  • Automated Doors: Used in temples to make it look like the gods were opening doors when a priest lit a fire.
  • Vending Machines: For holy water.
While Hero was a genius, many of these inventions were essentially "tech demos" to prove that his study of pneumatics and mechanics had value to the wealthy elite.

3. Romans: The Venture Capitalists​

If the Greeks were the "Research & Development" wing, the Romans were the "Project Managers." The Romans didn't care about the beauty of a prime number; they cared if the number helped them calculate the grain tax.
The Romans effectively "cannibalized" Greek math. They took the parts that worked for civil engineering—trigonometry for surveying and geometry for arches—and discarded the "useless" theoretical proofs.

The Evolution of "Useful" Research​

EraThe "Useless" ResearchThe "Justification" (The Pitch)
Ancient GreeceConic Sections (Parabolas)"It helps us aim catapults better!"
RenaissanceAstronomy/Planetary Motion"It makes our sea navigation safer!"
Modern DayQuantum Physics"It'll make your smartphone faster!"

It’s the same cycle: The brilliant minds want to solve the puzzle for the sake of the puzzle, but the people with the money want a return on their investment.

A Final Irony​

The "useless" Greek math ended up being the most important. Apollonius of Perga studied conic sections (ellipses and parabolas) in 200 BC just because he thought they were neat. It took 1,800 years before Johannes Kepler used that "useless" math to realize that planets move in ellipses, finally unlocking the secrets of the solar system.
Would you like to see an example of a Greek "math toy" that actually used incredibly advanced calculus-style logic centuries before we officially "invented" it?

You said
yes, lets see that toy

Gemini said
The "toy" in question is the Antikythera Mechanism. While it looks like a corroded lump of bronze, it is actually a 2,000-year-old analog computer.
Discovered in a shipwreck in 1901, it proved that the Greeks weren't just "playing" with math—they were using it to build hardware that wouldn't be matched for another 1,500 years.

The "Toy" That Predicted the Future​

The device was a hand-cranked box used to predict the positions of the sun, moon, and planets. But it didn't just track simple circles; it accounted for the fact that the moon’s speed appears to change as it orbits Earth (an elliptical effect).

How the Math became Metal​

To solve this, the Greeks used Differential Gearing.
  • The Problem: The moon doesn't move at a constant speed because its orbit is an ellipse.
  • The "Math" Solution: They used a pin-and-slot gear. One gear was set slightly off-center from the other. As the first gear turned, a pin slid along a slot in the second gear.
  • The Result: This created a mechanical output that sped up and slowed down, perfectly mimicking the variable speed of the moon.
This is essentially calculus in gear form. They were modeling a variable rate of change (differentiation) using bronze teeth.

 

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Final part

The "Justification" (The Pitch)​

So, how did the inventor justify the massive cost of bronze and the years of labor to build this?
  • The Calendar: It synchronized the solar and lunar years, which was vital for religious festivals.
  • The Games: One dial on the back specifically tracked the four-year cycle of the Panhellenic Games (including the Olympics).
  • The Eclipse Predictor: It could predict the timing and even the color of future eclipses. In an era where an eclipse could be seen as a divine omen, knowing when one was coming was the ultimate political "flex."

Why did it disappear?​

This is the great mystery of engineering history. We have the Antikythera Mechanism from roughly 100 BC, and then... nothing.
The Romans, as we discussed, were pragmatists. They likely saw this device and thought, "That’s an amazing toy, but can it help me move 20,000 gallons of water a day into Rome?" The answer was no. The Romans prioritized the macro-engineering (roads, arches, concrete) over the micro-engineering of gears and clocks.
The specialized knowledge required to build such a device was lost during the collapse of the Roman Empire, and society didn't see gears this complex again until the mechanical clocks of the 14th century.

I can show you how the Romans took one of these Greek "math toys"—the Odometer—and turned it into a massive industrial tool for mapping the empire. Would you like to see that?

You said
I'm about out of time but would comment that the Greeks were brilliant people both in their time and ours, and those Roman engineers were very much like our modern engineers who see reality not as a place to live and enjoy the beauty of it but as an engineering problem that needs an engineering solution.

Gemini said
That is a perfect summary. You’ve captured the "personality" of history’s greatest builders.
The Greeks were the Architects of the Mind, building beautiful logical cathedrals that didn't need to exist in the physical world to be perfect. The Romans were the Masters of the Earth, who looked at a mountain and didn't see a sacred site or a geometric shape—they saw an obstacle to a road that needed to be leveled.
It is the classic divide between the Why and the How:
  • The Greek Legacy: Philosophies and mathematical proofs that still form the bedrock of Western thought.
  • The Roman Legacy: A physical infrastructure so over-engineered that you can still drive on their roads and walk across their bridges 2,000 years later.
Modern engineering is essentially the marriage of the two: using the "pure" Greek math to solve the "dirty" Roman problems.
Since you're heading out, I'll leave you with this: the next time you see a "low clearance" sign or a perfectly graded highway, you're looking at a direct descendant of a Roman engineer holding a 20-foot wooden bench and a plumb bob.
Safe travels! If you ever want to dive into how the Romans "hacked" concrete to set underwater (another engineering marvel), just let me know next time!

(sorry I had to break that up into so many parts to paste it)
 

Lamb

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@Frankj that's pretty extensive. I got lost early on lol
 
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