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Reddit absolutely has algorithmic feeds since it ipo'ed (maybe earlier but I used third party apps so I wasn't subjected to them). 90% of my home page is bullshit I didn't ask for.

Yeah there is argument that reddit wasn't social media, but currently is trying to be

What does "ai in production" even mean? Writing production code ? Depending on how it gets reviewed and the qa mechanisms in place, could be stupid or not. Read only access to production systems and data? Again it depends on safeguards, but probably not stupid, it can be very useful for debugging. Unsupervised write access to production data or infrastructure? Incredibly stupid, but I dont think anyone serious does this.


Why not?


Aside from display quality I wonder if humans are more perceptive to changes in specific colors? Towards the end of the game some examples felt impossible while others were trivial .


Thanks! You mean to be able to search for movies that occurred in a specific set of locations? That's a really cool idea, I hadn't thought about it. The data is there already; it's just not searchable in that way. I might give it a go next week. I need to think of a nice UX for it.


Thank you! I'm fixing some early feedback about the UX and I'll do just that!


Thanks a lot for the usability feedback! I'm trying to improve it based on this and a few other early comments.

Regarding your question, one limitation I'm aware of is that my data consists mainly of movies _made as historical movies_, not movies that just happen to be set in the contemporary period of when the movie came out. Unfortunately there doesn't seem to be an easy way to identify this latter type of movies based only on wikipedia metadata/categories; so the only way I can think of would be to process _all_ movies on wikipedia and infer whether they are in a contemporary setting... but that's prohibitively expensive. I'll think about it more.


Thanks a lot for the feedback, this is what I was hoping to get. After working on something for too long the UX becomes so obvious that it's hard to imagine it from the perspective of someone seeing it for the first time. I'll work on the onboarding. And try to find some history subreddits where I can share this. Thanks for the encouragement!


I do it sometimes (even just through the openai playground on platform.openai.com) because the experience is incredible, but it's expensive. One hour of chatting costs around 20-30$.


What's funny/interesting from a psychological perspective is that several of these made me click (and discover genuinely interesting content) on links that I ignored in the real version. Could you do this everyday please?


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