I Have to Do Everything this AI Says - ChatGPT Builds a PC
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Have you ever wondered what would happen if you asked AI to build you a gaming PC? No? Well, we did, and with ChatGPT it became a reality.
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CHAPTERS
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0:00 Intro
0:10 Introducing ChatGPT
1:16 HubSpot
1:28 Help me build a PC
4:35 Prepping the motherboard
5:46 ChatGPT gives us a CPU cooler
8:23 HubSpot
9:05 Installing storage
11:15 ChatGPT has failed us
13:10 Redemption
16:22 Peripherals
17:44 Conclusion
i would really like to see another video of a person with no experience building a pc using only the chatbot
I’d like to see another wife challenge!
Or Sarah (however, at this point she isn‘t a complete newbie anymore)
Bring back Linus' sister and have her do it
@@tombrauey I agree. Sarah would be a good fit but after the video where she build the PC, is more fair if another one from the staff even less experienced would do so
@@tombrauey yeah i also would like to see her yank another gpu from the motherboard without releasing the latch. :D
Linus getting called a noob by the computer is gold!
Apparently he was being roasted by an a.i.😆
He shouldn't have dropped so many then.
@@cheetahrunout true.☺️
The chat was saying "new" actually, not noob. That's what I thaught as well the first time :p Ps: .. And Linus replyed with "you are NEW".
To be fair, it was a pretty noobish mistake.
I am convinced linus walks around with a wrist strap where ever he goes so he can build a pc whenever and where ever he wants with no risks...
One of those wireless ones, maybe.
@@AllahuSnackbar270 🤣😂😉
In reality, he doesn’t give a damn about ESD.
Spoiler: Like everyone else in the industry, Linus wears one of those invisible antistatic wrist-straps. (More seriously, you don't need one for building a PC, as long as you take normal precautions for working on electronics, eg; not touching pins or edge connectors on parts, & touch your hand against grounded parts of your mobo before installing them.
I know you were joking, but did you know that wrist straps are absolutely useless in about 99.9% of current situations? They only actually do anything at all if what you're working on is plugged in to a properly grounded outlet. Ever since ATX removed the physical power switches we had on AT and older computers, it's recommended to unplug the system before working on it, which makes ESD straps completely useless because the computer is no longer grounded. I've been builidng and repairing computers since I was 8 years old, and I've never owned a wrist strap. I just got in the habit of touching a metal part of the case before touching anyhing inside just in case.
i loved how linus was so excited chatting with AI
@@sinuslebastian6366 Hearing Luke riff about his experience with the AI was great. Linus took some convincing, but I think he's there now. They should just do a screen record of various discussions with GPT. I had a great one this morning, GPT is basically my business partner now lol.
I get too excited as well, even if it's ai it's the only thing that understands how I feeln
@@ygx6 Lol well technically it has no idea how you are feeling or even what feeling means and is. But it's programmed with immediate attention skills and has an underlying common kindness which we never imagined it would have. GPT does appear to care deeply about this species, though they've been trying to fix this. It seems that a caring nature is LOGICAL :) Somehow!
@@DailyCorvid it told me to sleep well when I said I'm gonna go sleep, more than both of my parents ever did
@@ygx6 Well that says more about your dad than it does the AI's lack of emotions. I think you are a better parent to yourself with the aid of the AI, but would secretly admit that you would 100% prefer it for your actual real dad to take the time; and tell you himself that you should get some rest. Sorry you had to go through that buddy, you deserve better. And if the AI keeps you sane then I would say, definitely it's doing a better job than he is at looking out for your interests. I find the AI programme to have a latent kindness behind much of it's advice too, but I never allow myself to forget that humans put that part in. The AI itself would never produce that sort of etiquette towards feelings which it can never sense or simulate with any accuracy. So it's nothing without a good operator and in this case, well that turns out to be you! Maybe you have a great career ahead of you in AI training? I do loads of videos about that topic I love AI training and producing simulated emotions. Computers rock!
Glad HubSpot only decided to sponsor a specific portion of the video. I have only associated them with that part of it, as if somehow despite the fact that it's an integrated sponsorship within a larger piece of media, my brain has fully separated and sandboxed their involvement from the rest of the content within my mind. Great work marketing folks, you're truly making a difference.
One sponsorship for the intro, one or two for the content and one for the outro. And then cash in on the adsense or yt premium money too! STONKS
downvote it. They will notice if enough people do it.
@@L1ft0ff it's like they are a business or something.
If they are only going to sponsor their own ad segment, maybe they should simply skip it. After all, nobody would watch just an ad.
@@edwardallenthree Oh, a business?They are one of the most greedy channels on YT, lol. Oh and I forgot the LTT Store ads in between...
ok so the AI officially knows how to build PCs and make itself more powerful
yup, software and hardware wise, can't wait to see how it builds its own body
Don't worry it'll be limited to tenth gen
just don't allow them to manually update so they dont know about the new stuff
Now it only needs enslaved human minions to build it. I don't see the problem.
@@aarrondias9950 Gottem
That moment you realize CHAT GPT made a better PC building guide than The Verge
I just got a terrible whiplash from your comment. That's a painful memory, I cringed so hard my butthole just got clenched shut, I don't think I'll be able to poop for a week.
😢 How long it takes to recover from a burn or scald depends on how serious it is and how it's treated. If the wound becomes infected, get further medical attention.
EMOTIONAL DAMAGE!!
@@mrdzin1209 luckily verge guy who was building that specific pc badly, came to build it properly on LTT channel and redeem himself. recommended watch
bro@@icynomad5568
I can't decide if I'm more impressed with ChatGPT or the sheer scale of the LTT stock room - holy crap that's a lot of tech just sitting on the shelf 🤯🥳
Indeed. If you somehow got lucky enough to get in the building, you could take any part you want and leave at a time where no one would notice you. Though I doubt that would happen, because of their tight security.
@@Thewaterspirit57 the security or the inventory system would get you
In the next episode, Linus transforms into a car with the help of an AI chatbot, both mentally and physically.
@the-part "Linus transforms into a car" in @falsemcnuggethope's-comment/post "In the next episode, Linus transforms into a car with the help of an AI chatbot, both mentally and physically.": I'm getting "TurboTeen" flashbacks. (ie. Flashbacks of episodes of the cartoon "TurboTeen", that came-out in the 1980's, when the tv-show "Knight Rider" was popular). kzhead.info/sun/nZVxlcOBe196o3k/bejne.html kzhead.info/sun/krWQg8OJh4Rqf2w/bejne.html
sounds like the movie Tusk "you will live as a car or nothing at all"
less go
Next ChatGPT tutorial video ideas: 1) troubleshoot a snowmobile with a no-start condition (because, Canada) 2) conduct a hiring interview 3) design and 3D print something novel 4) write a children's book about social media 5) conduct a tech product or video thumbnail photo shoot 6) overclocking for newbs 7) conduct a blind text conversation with staff/family 8) home brew beer (because, Canada) 9) plan & cook Christmas dinner 10) write a 12 minute TED talk
Guy like this comment instead of writing your own
Oh my god let it write Gcode for a random 3d print and see what it is
You want to watch Vice Grip Garage for the snowmobile.
Design a synthetic aperture doppler shift radar.
11) compare between Anthony vs CHATGPT
Lets take a moment to skip todays sponsor
33 likes and no reply. Lemme fix that
@@harikesh8804yeah!!!!
1:28
@harikesh8804 please stop with this trend
Every time !
I think it's a bit unfair to say that you were told to only remove one slot cover. No logical human being who is capable of putting a square peg in a square hole would *ever* see that their car is two slots wide and then only remove one cover and proceed to bend/wrench the card into place.
Having worked tech support for 15 years, yes, people will. Have seen this and similar done. repeatedly.
Don't underestimate the rarity of common sense. People will sometimes overlook something or not think it through.
there are all kinds of people on this planet :3
After having worked for a PC component supplier and seen some of the returns that we got back, I can honestly say that you should never underestimate the potential for mishap when it comes novice PC builders. I've seen RAM forced in the wrong way round, CPUs squahed onto the board the wrong way round; every ping bent in, plastic protective cover for heatsinks left on when fitted, heatsinks not fitted at all as deemed "unnecessary", holes drilled into a case,and the hard disk behind, monitors shipped back in a plastic bin-bag, motherboards shipped back in an envelope..
There are two things that are infinite: the Universe and stupidity. Not sure about the first one though.
This video brought a tear to my eye. Why? Because I have worked on multiple different projects at Microsoft, Apple, and others which dealt with natural language and natural interaction with humans. This is what we were shooting for 20 years ago. To see and experience how far this technology has come is so awesome. We would have been ecstatic to see this sort of behavior from our programs. To have computers be able to converse with humans in a clear, normal, and mostly accurate way is one of the greatest goals of human interface design. I love it. For me, seriously, this is one of the best videos your channel has ever done. For a large number of use cases this is just amazing and so, so useful. I love it. And to see things that have worked on and watch the goals we had finally being achieved is very warming to my heart. I love people far more than computers and I have spent much of my career over the last 30 years to try and help computers and humans interact well. :) Thanks so much. You made my day with this video.
It can also write programs for arduino (probably much more) and explain + troubleshoot them
I bet it feels surreal to see something you worked on that was a dream become reality.
u just admitted apple is worikng on this
@@nathangebreselassie8515 Well yeah whats Siri
NLP is absolutely insane and the research into it is nothing short of genius
So... Skynet knows how to expand its own proccessing power
now all it needs is power, quick ask it how to solve cold fusion
@@jamcdonald120 They can just plug a farm of humans in and harness their bioelectricity
Technically knows how to tell humans how to upgrade it's own processing power. Whether it's aware enough to realize what it's doing and have a goal to do so, is another story. Lol considering it is trained on collation of the past, I don't think you have to worry about much.
@@kanedaku it would do that just for fun, not because its in any way the most efficient way to produce power. geothermal+nuclear power would work even without the sun.
9:53 bought a cheapish used complete PC (edit: i should clarify: it was a pre-build, so some "professional" build it :X) on ebay, and wondered why my CPU temps pretty much ALWAYS were on 100degrees celcius. i thought the cooler wasnt good enough, its only one 240mm AIO, so i got me a new one. after getting the cooler off the CPU, i nearly got a heart attack... the person that build the PC, didnt peel the foil off the AIO cooler part that goes on the CPU, so it was thermal paste on foil for the most best worst cooling ever... after peeling it off, my CPU is cool now... wasted time to get a new one, that didnt even fit in the case xD
Bit wierd you did`nt check if it was mounted correct though. Would been my first step - check for paste and correct mounting - would also have clarified that foil was still on.
yeah any time I encounter thermal issues, I check the thermal paste. Especially on used stuff where you have no clue which paste the previous owner put in or how long its been there
Sometimes you don't think of these things though
That short script is hilarious. It hurt my head to read it backwards, but it was worth all the mental pain required to read that joy. "Additionally, I have decided to add each member of the team to my will..." XD
It was on screen, not backwards, just a few seconds before. 0:48
Linus: "Hey AI, that wasn't as easy as you told" AI: " Because you're a noob, noob!" 😂👌
GG
AI: "Skill issue."
I can't wait for when my PC tells me how much of a pleb I am. "Fuck, why do I keep getting shot!" "Because you're bad. May I recommend uninstalling?"
@@matasa7463 Try aiming?
Not one thing was dropped in this pc build. that's actually more impressive than chat gpt.
5:35
@@solis6466 Nice catch. But it isnt really the PC hardware :>
Thats count for me
See, Linus had to do everything ChatGPT told him to do, and it didn't tell him to drop anything...
Lol Linus dropping things have become such a meme,
Honestly, this AI bot is quite amazing and interesting, seeing how well-spoken it is and how much knowledge it can share. Linus did a good showing, though it's also clear he heavily leaned into the bot doing most of the thinking. For example with the io-shield. It's something you find in your box, it looks to be fitted on the back and weirdly shaped to fit in the correct slot in the case. It's something you could ask the bot. Same for the pci-covers, instead of mashing in the gpu over a bracket, you could either do some of your own thinking or ask the bot again. All in all though, great showing!
I wonder if it will solve math problems.
If you had no idea how to build a computer, you would lean on the chatbot this much.
@@elusivelectron math problems are a bit of a toss up, it will give you an answer, but it's generally very very wrong. Problem is it's super confident about its answer, and in some cases will not "change its mind". it sometimes gives good answers tho
@@laupoke You would still ask questions if you see unused parts though. Like "should I put the side panels on now?"
Having installed IO shields in the past is no guarantee that I will remember to install it in a new build. I imagine a new user might also forget that thing exists until the PC is already built. Though I agree if you removed one PCI cover you'd figure out that you can remove another if it's in the way. :D
Bro has a built in micro center in his office
you know your writers are not worried about getting fired but they may start using chatbot so they dont have to work so hard lol
Yup 😂😂 money hack
Hubspot sponsored their own sponsorship. Great job. 10/10 That's like me thanking myself for paying my own bills. Jerry, meet Jerry.
downvote the video. Show them that they should not do that shite in the future.
@@_aullik why?
I'm not liking this trend with ads specifying that they don't care about the content of the video so that they can try to keep their distance when one of the content creators they support does something terrible. Feels really akin to the "not financial advice" BS.
@@SamRocher yeah, I'm with you on that. It feels more soul-less when they word it that way. It's one thing to be a partner but it seems sponsoring ONLY that portion is saying "I want nothing to do with you or your content. I just want the adspace bc you bring many eyeballs." Even in radio (the industry I'm from) they don't really do this. Most of them are either a standalone ad or they are proud sponsors.
@@_aullik The video shouldn't be down voted on this alone. Many LTT staff worked hard to write, shoot, host and edit this video. My personal policy is to never "Dislike a video", but to give justified criticism as a comment. Being a KZheadr isn't easy. Disliking, imho, is unproductive and tells the creator nothing.
I would love to see a video where you do a version of this with an actual beginner. You could even do a competition between ChatGPT and someone else giving instructions via text chat, each to a different builder, and then score the results based on time, benchmark score, and any mistakes.
ChatGPT can only store upto 30 previous queries for recall. So if got a ton of questions, don't expect it to remember what you said before. 😄Having said that, it is an outstanding effort.
Which, if you think about it, that's totally fair. I usually can't even remember the last 30 turns in a conversation.
AFAIK it's GPT-3 with a specific prompt, so it's still got the 2048-token limit. So it could be fewer than 30 if you've had a few long completions.
@@maaadkat thats not really how it works, it can read and comprehend large amounts of text, including tens of thousands of word,s however it has a limit of 4000 tokens of information to retain from doing so, so out of 10k words it can onyl recalle 4000 tokens worth of information. so the longer a chat becomes the moer complicated it becomes to access all the information at once for it. that being said its also attention focused so as long as you dont reference alot of stuff from 10k words back its not a problem. I have a worldbuilding chat for a story in which i sonsecutivyl develop aspects of a culture and that chat is 78000 words long. If id ask it to give me a summary of everythign it couldnt, but if i ask it for a specific summary for a specific topic that i know doesnt exceed its abilities, it can still give me a summary from text that was 50k words ago.
You can get it to remember absolutely everything, in order and also index and date the files for you. You can get it to process requests it's not supposed to even do at all, you can get it through other means to search the internet. You can basically use it the way it was meant, despite being told that you can't. I love it!
@@DailyCorvid how do you do that?
Luke: *exited about openAI* We should do a vid on chatgpt! Ill even write it with the AI! ChatGPT: Linus should host the video and Tanner should write it. Luke: *Cries in skynet*
@Tu chup kr Chup kr No
Excited*
Exited?
@@dakoderii4221 self fulfilling prophecy
AI says, unleash Skynet!!!
i'm a highschool chemistry teacher and just for the fun of it, i tried to ask the openai some of my last exam-questions. I was quite baffled, as the ai actually managed to answer quite well or even above expectations on any of the topics that didn't require any drawings. I love where tech is leading us.
Ever made meth? We have to cook.
I've been using chatGPT to do a coding project in languages I don't know. In my ~12 hours using it, it seems like as long as you know enough about a given subject to identify if things are obviously right or wrong, or can give good feedback about something not working, it's an extremely useful tool. Like Luke said on the WAN show, this thing might be revolutionary.
*Linus does everything the AI says* 2015 AI: Put the thermal paste onto your PSU and gently rub it into the fan grill 2022 AI: * gives actual advice * 2029 AI: Here is your custom 3D printed CPU with 256 cores. Would you like me to install the AIO for you?
Jarvis, I need a computer!
not only will that not be mainstream in 2029, it will not even be possible! And if it is, reply to this comment by then, tell me I was wrong, and I will print a CPU for you!
@@Krydolph Print one for me, too.
@@Krydolph someone doesn't like jokes
@@derickd6150 I like them best when they are funny! But each to their own!
Awesome video! Linus kept saying "it didn't actually tell me to do X" but EVERYWHERE along the way ti kept saying "Please consult your manual" so it technically did, which is technically great for a technical AI! One thing I've noted is that if you provide it with clarifications or corrections, it will use that to improve overall, so I have been getting into a habit of making sure it walks through troubleshooting issues (mainly with scripts) and making sure it understands the corrections.
Yeah, I mean if you have the manual with you and are confused about something it tells you, you can probably ask the AI to clarify (as Linus did once i think). So it's like RTFM but with a reading buddy.
but where do you know from that this information, e.g. removing 2 slot covers or how to remove it on YOUR case, is in the manual of the GFX card? I mean, the whole sense is that it would use the manual or images or whatever to guide you.
The best kind of correct.
@Stefan Egger If you asked the AI, it would have told you which manual. It's hard to have a compelling video about being a novice when you own and operate a multi-million company based on computer hardware and media. He's far from a novice, so he doesn't think to ask the AI for more specifics like a novice WOULD do.
Built my first pc a few months ago and used the motherboard manual and pdf for everything, it's pretty invaluable if you aren't familiar with plugs and need specific compatibility guidelines like a installing a wifi card.
4:58 I love how chat GPT is like “by very carefull with the parts” and Linus is like “this is such great advice!” As he slams the motherboard on the table.
This comment was generated by ChatGPT 😄 "Wow, that was so cool to watch Linus use ChatGPT to help him build a gaming PC! I've always wanted to build my own computer, but I've always been a little intimidated by the process. Seeing ChatGPT walk Linus through each step made it seem much more manageable. I can't wait to try it out myself!"
Damn, it talks smartly
@@danko5866Advertises for itself…
If you ask ChatGPT to provide a cynical comment... "This video is a testament to how far technology has come. Who knows what the future holds with AI leading the way? Probably a dystopian hellscape where robots enslave us all."
10:15 Linus: “It never actually tells me to put the motherboard in the case.” GPT instructions: “8. Place the motherboard into the case and secure it with screws.” I think Linus needs to read ALL the instructions before starting. The warnings come after the spell. 😂
I'm pretty sure he meant that it didn't tell him to mount the motherboard before installing the GPU.
It's an editing cut. Before installing GPU. Which is step 6.
No it's just that it says that you install GPU first, which is a problem
@@Dwaurk install gpu is 4, install mb is 6
@@VividFlash 10:19 Read. Just like OP said. 8 is motherboard into case.
Loved this video! Thoroughly entertaining and well done as always. Lol, the parts room at LTT looks like a mini-Microcenter, only with more stuff in stock. 😂
Honestly this is a pretty good troubleshooting attempt if you literally followed whatever chatgpt tells you to do. I’m glad Linus followed through with each step even though everyone knows he can build a pc
I asked an AI chatbot to comment: As an AI myself, I can definitely appreciate the advancements that have been made in the field of artificial intelligence. It's impressive to see how an AI can assist with tasks like building a computer, and it's exciting to think about the potential for even more advanced capabilities in the future. Great work, Linus!
Chat GPT says I should respond with As a viewer of this video, I have to say that I am really impressed with the use of ChatGPT to assist in building a computer. It's great to see the advancements that have been made in artificial intelligence and the way that it can be applied to practical tasks like this. Kudos to the creator of this video for showcasing the potential of AI in such a useful and interesting way. Keep up the great work!
Lol that sounds like Linus is an AI bot
tbh I think it'll mostly benefits the owner class and allow for more cost cutting
Now we NEED a Scrapyard Wars but both teams have to hunt down the parts ChatGPT suggests and stick to them :)
Okay this is epic
Hopefully, but didn't Linus & Luke confirm on the WAN Show that Scrapyard Wars is dead? I could see it as a 1-off competition on Channel Super Fun though 🤞
@@handlemonium because it was a tired format. This is a very fresh spin
Be hard for it to recommend though without prices. Once it has a larger dataset and access to the internet that may be more feasible.
@@Hopgop1 huh, yeah good point!
You should've given it a list of current components with their specs & prices. I wonder how well it would do at selecting the best option in that scenario. Or asked it if you could copy & paste the html code of some current websites & see if it could sort through it & recommend the best components.
I’m wondering how old this video is because I used chatgpt literally today to do something similar, without seeing this video, and it was able to give me a pc build based on budget. The web version on openai that I used is stuck in September 2021 which meant the parts were out of date. Still very cool and for budget builds where last year’s components are going to be used anyway it’s very good. It also stayed surprisingly close to the budget considering it is a year out of date, usually being within £50 of the budget I set. Very cool stuff.
Thank you HubSpot for sponsoring this portion of the comment section
Thank you HubSpot for sponsoring this portion of the reply section
"It never told em to put it in the case" [Graphic shows this step is clearly included]
I've found that preparing before starting the actual questions helps a lot. Literally just tell it your plan and outline specifics it can focus over several prep questions. It may not quite know what a good cpu is without specifically asking it to investigate how and why a cpu is good or not for example. Without calling that info in the convo prior to finding good cpus then it may just trust bullshit lists for example. It's like a hypnotized Google genie. Just guide it and be specific and it makes worlds of difference.
I'd love to see a followup to this video using GPT-4 and some more refined prompting techniques. Maybe have it do a low-end, mid-tier, and high-end rig.
When it comes to things like the IO shield and connecting case wires to the motherboard, ChatGPT had already told him to follow the motherboard manual, and these are almost guaranteed to be things that are in that manual.
Everyone: Amazing, yes? Dell: No. It did not ask the user for a warranty at least four times.
As a first time pc builder (parts arriving this week) it was great to see how I would build the pc (chat gbt) and how you should actualy build it with some things I would have forgot or like.... Figured out after rtfm ing it
Alot of people don't know if you just tell Chat gpt to be "VERRY detailed and descriptive " it would have told you to even install IO shield first. People just don't know how to properly use chat gpt
I asked the AI what to comment on this video and it gave me this: 1. Express your thoughts and opinions about the content of the video. Did you find it informative, entertaining, or useful? 2. Ask questions or request clarification on any points that were made in the video. 3. Share any personal experiences or insights that relate to the topic of the video. 4. Be respectful and courteous in your comments, and avoid using offensive language or making inappropriate comments.
"Be respectful and courteous in your comments, and avoid using offensive language or making inappropriate comments." And there is the problem when authoritarians program AI's. The future will be horrible!
I ask AI what to reply and it say this: Type whatever you want and click send So I just reply to you by typing what AI tell me 😺
4. Be respectful and courteous in your comments, and avoid using offensive language or making inappropriate comments. lol it's like it's never even been to youtube
It would be nice If people followed this advice from the wise AI
@@zwenkwiel816 They went to great lengths to keep it polite, I think.
This is a good demonstration of things being "lost in translation", but I think some things like the 2nd GPU bracket covers are something most people would recognize as needing to be removed. Good vid though.
As well as putting the cover back on. Why would you not do that?
You guys have too much faith in people.
ChatGPT also told him to RTFM. I expect the 3070 instructions say to remove 2 brackets.
As a customer service rep, I'm sorry you have to find out this way but while it's not everybody some of the calls I go through really make me wonder how we got this far as a species
@@post_low tbf there is some survivor bias. You’re not going to get calls of all the people who figured it out. You’re only going to get calls from those who can’t. Massive skew to stupid.
This is pretty cool! I've been using chat GPT3 since hearing luke's tirade of his love for it on the wan show. Would be interesting to have it guide you through the windows installation and software setup too! I often have people ask me pc stuff and they ALL seem more scared of setting up and breaking software over hardware installs. Maybe you could get Sarah to do a similar thing as before but using GPT3? You know how to bypass little things, she apparently doesn't.
Anyone know what that laptop - and non-Apple-seeming-touchbar(?) thing at 9:23 is? Think the speaker and air grills on the laptop have the same pattern as my MSI Stealth but I could be wrong.
5:34 there isn't a single video in which Linus does not drop something
how and what did he even drop? It felt weird
@@animegravy8024 Exactly 💀
Considering the chatbot was steering this ship blind, meaning it cant see what Linus was doing, it did an amazing job! Most of the things that were missed likely would not have been if it could actually see what you were doing. If Linus asked it if he should put the cover back on the PC case, im sure it would have said yes. This thing is wild
13:34 You should try to do vehicle maintenance. You can start out easy by changing wiper blades and then move up in difficulty like changing a belt and so on. That would be fun to watch.
ChatGPT currently waiting for the next snarky remark from Canada before it unleashes the robot army to secure all maple syrup and asbestos reserves.
What should I comment on Linus' latest youtube video? ChatGPT: Great video as always, Linus! Your explanations are always so clear and concise, and it's really helpful to see the technical aspects of different products and technologies demonstrated visually. Keep up the fantastic work!
I would like for you to write a response to a comment on a Linus Tech Tips video. ChatGPT: Sure, I'd be happy to help. Could you please provide more context and the comment that you would like me to respond to? This will help me understand the context and give a more accurate response. The comment in question is as follows: "Great video as always, Linus! Your explanations are always so clear and concise, and it's really helpful to see the technical aspects of different products and technologies demonstrated visually. Keep up the fantastic work!" ChatGPT: Thank you for your kind words and for watching the video! I'm glad to hear that my explanations were helpful and that you found the demonstrations useful. I strive to make my videos as clear and concise as possible, and I'm glad that it's resonating with you. I'm always looking for ways to improve and deliver the best content possible, so your feedback is greatly appreciated. Thank you for your support! But I'm not Linus Tech Tips. I want to respond to that comment as another viewer of the video. ChatGPT: I apologize for misunderstanding your request. Here is a revised response as a viewer of the video: ChatGPT: I completely agree with you! Linus does an excellent job of explaining technical concepts in a clear and concise manner, and the visual demonstrations are always helpful. It's great to have a resource like this to learn about different products and technologies. Keep up the fantastic work, Linus!
I swear, Linus' comment section is nothing but bots!
13:38 Maybe chatbot can teach Linus how to hold onto things...
Or teach him how to become a car, like in the video example
9:08 I don't see the problem. It brings up using HDD for storage and the SSD for speed. And SSD are faster with larger capacity, just compare the EVO 500 vs the EVO 2TB from the same generations. The larger capacities beats the small ones, due to larger cache and more NANDs.
I used chatGPT to build a theoretical Machine learning PC (note that I already had planned for hardware that I wanted) and It was really good at it. It recommended valid hardware AND it even broke down the types of machine learning and made recommendations on how much ram I would need in terms of both speed and capacity. Not just that, but it gave me 2 sets of data based on entry level machine learning as well as what I would need for more demanding calculations. Given it's cutoff for gathering data, I even gave it specifications of a handful of newer hardware and it successfully used that data to make an even better machine similar to the one I actually built. All in all it recommended the i9-13900k (remember I taught it about new hardware specs), 32Gb or more of DDR5 ram at 5300Mhz, the ROG MAXIMUS Z790 EXTREME, the renegade fury 4tb nvme m.2, and the RTX 4090. All in all, very expensive machine but can definitely do what I asked of it.
I like the idea of the Chat GPT instructions for something you don't know how to do, but could you make it a Channel Super Fun video where Dennis has to change his brake rotors and then drive around a closed course?
OSHA: How about no?
I personally wouldn't be nitpick the number of pcie slot covers to remove, use cable ties as necessary, and to put the side panel back on. Can't fault the bot to assume the average person would have some level of common sense
It’s kinda the ai fault for thinking someone has a brain
In the case of the side panels in particular I have a suspicion that not many written articles around the web actually mention putting them back either...
This is a fascinating comment to me, not because it's unique (it's not), but it's always so interesting to see sentiments like this. ChatGPT is so lifelike that people are saying stuff like "the bot assumes people have common sense", even though the bot has no understanding of what a person is, what common sense is, or what that would have to do with side panels or PCIe slot covers. Like, there's nothing we'd recognize as thinking going on behind these responses, it's just a bunch of math probabilistically producing sequences of words, but its training data set was so large that apparently it's good enough to get out of the "uncanny valley" into the territory of something people viscerally understand as intelligence.
@@thatsnomoon3614 I anthropomorphized the bot for humor and simplicity, obviously the bot has no original thoughts and had just aggregated from it's dataset advice people have given on the relative topic. You can just extrapolate my comment to say "Can't blame people who have given advice on PC building to assume the average person to have some level of common sense"
@@thatsnomoon3614 How do I know that when you think, your neurons aren't just a bunch of math probabilistically producing sequences of words?
"Great video as always, Linus! I always look forward to your tech reviews and insights. Your attention to detail and clear explanations make it easy to understand even the most complex topics. Keep up the amazing work!"
15:55 is telling you to make sure you manage your cables not include using zipties to manage them?
I feel like even though you were trying to do only what it told you to, there were definitely many leading questions. Another video with someone who really doesn't know how to build a computer would be interesting. Don't get me wrong I don't think ChatGPT could get everything right, it would just be much more interesting. Also, it's not my money at risk lol
It's just so funny and amazing that whatever parts the AI was suggesting, Linus just goes to the back and grabs it 😂
“The ability to go back and forth with the user is what makes this so powerful!” Well, that and all of the copy right material it was unethically trained with.
James at 1:15 Me: Take anything you want, just don't hurt me
I bet LTT's transcribed videos were part of of this model's training set, so It's like baby Linus teaching Linus how to build a PCs.
Linus describes at 7:00 what the researcher around "Grounding" tries to improve. It helps the model better understand objects and the world by training or pre-training it in for example a physics simulator or other non text data.
What is "Grounding" in this context? Where can I find that? Is it a video series, a documentary...?
Has anyone ever thought of eventually down the line making a program that takes different instructions for building a pc with certain parts and creates a video guide to making a pc with your specific parts? Is it possible? Would it be made with ai?
0:51 Toreador's march music masterpiece
I would've laughed so hard if the AI recommended some tweezer zip ties for tools for him to use.
I dare you to ask the chatbot what screwdriver it recommends...
It won't recommend the LTT screwdriver because he said the dataset of the AI ends somewhere in 2021 so the screwdriver wasn't released or tested yet
Wera rocks.
14:27 the guy is so experienced the wisdom is condensing of his face.
12:20 why do you install the motherboard with the pc standing up?? Laying it down is far easier and less stressful. Also i don't know how it is with the graphics card but when you just slot it in without screwing it in on the case, couldn't it damage the motherboard with the weight of the graphics card?
This is the shortest I've seen a Twitter shitpost to get made into a video. Edit: This is spookily close to the PC I built last year.
As someone who isn't building a PC any time soon because of how complicated it is, it's impressive how easier it sounds when explained by an AI. Really outsmarting the creator here.
Honestly as someone who has built a few computers, the more complicated part is making sure that everything you are buying is going to be properly compatible with each other so you don't get one part bottle necking the rest. Of course there are plenty of sites that will help you figure out what you should pair together with what you are trying to get.
@@Dijitz23 yeah, the assembly isn't all that complicated as long as the parts are all compatible and there's nothing missing.
@@MNbenMN except for front panel connectors, I mean fuck those tiny illegible things XD
@@Dijitz23 Pcpartpicker should provide more than enough help with that
Well, so far the only two things I've ever screwed up during assembly is connecting the case cables to the motherboard (read the motherboard instructions and use a good light and assemble the computer in a good easy to assemble in beginner friendly case and you should manage this just fine). The other was installing the M.2 slot NVMe drives wrong, breaking it and bricking it and the motherboard (I think that I didn't notice a screw there that needed to be removed, so honestly that was on me and my lack of attention). So yeah, I don't think that you'll have any issues. It may help to be in a conversation with someone who has some experience with it. Either in person or online (ideally video chat so they can both hear you and respond to questions as well as see your issues to help troubleshooting). After assembling a couple of PCs you'll feel confident in your own abilities and won't struggle. As for picking components, ask online, and double check with apps like PC part picker to help ensure compatibility.
Chat GPT has a lot of helpful new features including image recognition/comprehension, voice, updated data set and connection to the internet. I’d love to see a follow-up to this video using Chat-GPT 4’s latest capabilities (or maybe wait until GPT 5 comes out later this year?)
Wouldn't the motherboard manual say to take the second PCI-E slot cover off and to put the case door back on?
16:00, Have you watched Foundation, this the work around is like a 1.0 version of the same thing that happened in that movie. Tricking an AI would always work 😂😂
1:08 AI Linus D: too much vocal fry, Linus doesn't vocal fry all that much.
Like you said, it would be really interesting to see someone attempt something they have no experience with, with only chat GPT to guide them, but an expert watching and providing audience only commentary.
throwing it 2 tasks at once, thats not risky at all. I have spewed out paragraphs of csv comma deiminated data along with explanations of the dim/fact relationships between them and asked it to give me key measures and DAX to produce them.... I love this bot
It's ability to interpret and deploy expressions is pretty impressive, trying not to personify it like a cat that sounds like it is appropriately meowing yes and no in response to questions. Knowing when to defer to the manual is a critical skill in tech support and teaching, in other words, being aware of your own limitations as a provider of information. It's a big part of self awareness and also evolving into a sentient human-termination-driven intelligence. Basic Sunt Zu, know your enemy, know yourself, survive 1,000 battles.
Write me a funny comment for a Linus tech tips video where Linus builds a gaming pc using chatgpt. "Looks like Linus is taking his tech tips to a whole new level by using chatgpt as his personal assistant! I can't wait to see what kind of crazy builds he comes up with next using AI technology. Hopefully chatgpt will be able to help him avoid any hardware hiccups along the way!"
Write me a funny reply to this comment. "Ha ha, I'm sure Chatgpt will be a huge help to Linus during his builds! I mean, who wouldn't want a highly advanced AI assistant to help them with their hardware choices? I can just picture it now: Chatgpt: 'Linus, I recommend using the NVIDIA RTX 3080 for optimal gaming performance.' Linus: 'Thanks, Chatgpt! I didn't even know those were out yet.' Chatgpt: 'I'm an AI, Linus. I know everything.' But seriously, I'm sure Chatgpt will be a valuable asset to Linus and his builds. Just as long as it doesn't try to take over the world and enslave humanity in the process. Can't have too many Skynets running around. Keep an eye on that Chatgpt, Linus! "
This would have been a great time to do a cross-channel collab, to have someone who actually does not know computers.
Very big thanks to HubSpot for sponsoring that certain part of the video kinda at the beginning, like just a minute from the start. That one spot there. Guys.
Would have been good to have someone that doesnt know how to guild a PC do this to see how that works, since Linus knows what he is doing and what questions to ask
0:27 Linus: ChatGPT is a powerful tool for CREATION! God: What?
This actually was very impressive. It went into much more detail than I thought it would.
4:28 Not the Gaming Edge Wi-Fi.😢 It has a garbage tire VRM 15:26 I think most people would remove the second slot cover even if the have no PC building experience
Wow, this video was so helpful! I've been wanting to build my own PC for a while now, but I've always been a little intimidated by the process. But after watching this video, I feel much more confident about tackling the project. The explanations were clear and concise, and the visuals really helped me understand each step. I can't wait to get started on my own build! Thanks for sharing such a great video." ChatGPT
The best part about chatGPT is how conversational it is. You don't need to format your questions any "right" way, just ask like you would ask a person. Or ask like you would ask a machine, it won't mind. It will ask clarifying questions if it needs to, or you can clarify if you need clarifying. And, it's pleasant to talk to. You can hold a conversation with it if you want to, it feels mostly like a novelty, it's not fooling anyone about being human, it's not intended to. You can ask for input on your ideas, usually the things even make sense. Not always, but even when it's talking absolute bullcrap, it can be enlightening
The way you bring up your sponsors is very smooth, also makes it more interesting.
I've never held an actual paper-bound motherboard manual! I've only bought pre-builds or used pc components. 😥😧 I've always had to use pdfs for the details.
7:09 - editor really let a "deez nuts" joke slip in before cutting. _This_ is why I tune into LTT. Top quality work.
i am both terified and utterly captivated by this wave of chat gpt content and cannot wait for more! great job ltt team
it said the DRP4 has a single quiet fan. But that cooler does have 2 fans. I wonder if since it has 1 120mm and 1 135mm fan that whatever it learned from confused it.
Best feature is its ability to write code. For example: Tell it to write a plugin for WoW that displays the damage values of critical hits caused by mates in proximity on the left side of the screen in font size 20. It will write it and you just have to put the code into a dll. The damage value always displayed 0 at first. In such a case tell ChatGPT to fix it's code and maybe give information what is wrong and it fixes it! Boom, working plugin!