Not related to the Hume team in any way, but I couldn't help laughing throughout most of my conversation. Seems like a seismic shift that felt straight out of HER.
Was honestly blown away by the responsiveness of the chat. At risk of getting carried away... I can't imagine this being anything short of a game-changer?
Also, any ideas how it responds so quickly to conversation? Seems like GPT 3.5-level speed with the awareness of 4+.
I used this but, upon asking which model it is, it replied as being a "fine-tuned version of GPT 3.5". Any clue why? In a second chat it replied "You're chatting with one of the fine-tuned versions of the OpenAssistant model!".
Product description: Flywheel is instant analytics for product-led growth (aka freemium or free trial products). You'll learn which marketing tactics drive in-app product adoption with zero configuration after integrating a data source. Recent companies have onboarded in <3 minutes if they use Segment / Intercom, or <1hr to install our custom Flywheel.js tracking script.
Testing: Sign up is free with no CC. We want to validate that our calculations work for a wide variety of use cases and event formats, and learn how much value the tool can provide for smaller companies with few, or no, data analysts.
Contact info: You can ping me directly at chase@theflywheel.app or use Intercom inside the app
Wife is a dentist. There certainly are practices where treatments are recommended as a function of money and cashflow (laser treatment and other "optional" treatments are a great example of this). However, crown / cavity recommendations are largely dependent on how aggressive that particular dentist's philosophy is. E.g. my wife only goes to her father for treatment because he focuses on saving teeth whenever possible.
Unlikely that a dentist would ever recommend filling cavities if they didn't believe it was necessary – they're not very profitable for practices. Crowns are sometimes recommended when a filling will suffice, but that's usually because crowns last ~10 years and fillings only delay the inevitable crown for a few years.
This is why I like going to dental schools faculty or student practices. They are all about saving the teeth if it can be saved and will need to see sufficient evidence in the imaging before moving forward with just about anything. Things seem to take longer and involve more appointments (e.g. i have to schedule a separate appointment with dept of radiology vs the private practice dentist walking me to the next room with the xray), but it seems like every decision involves multiple dental professors looking at my imagery or feeling up my teeth or gums before anything is done, which definitely boosts my confidence. I like having a committee and hearing them discuss the evidence in this war room setting when I'm laying there on the chair mouth open
I've looked into this myself and one negative is that students still have some pressure to overtreat because students have graduation requirements (e.g. must do a certain number of fillings, crowns, etc.). Granted, having to run everything by a supervisor will eliminate the egregious cases.
They can't overtreat due to the nature of it with literally all work needing a professor looking at the mouth or the work in progress and validating. If anything they need too much evidence to go forward and will want to see things like a CT to validate something in a traditional xray. When they want to do a certain amount of required things, they screen the local community for cavities and turn up plenty, including mine when I went and they were sure to point out the cavity to me on the imagery and go over my options and relative risks. Most of the times they are overburdened with demand of patients since this is about the only place where low income people can afford dental care so I expect they see plenty of examples to study. Oddly though my student told me he hoards extracted teeth to study and practice with.
There are a lot of decisions in dentistry that are subjective. There are a ton of borderline cases of cavities where you ask 5 dentists what they think, and 2 say to treat and 3 say to wait and see. This is what I'm talking about where dental schools will probably lean towards treating.
I really hope it won't. Let's cherish the high quality comments of HN. Once this comment section becomes a karma-fed race to the bottom driven by who can make the most memeable jokes, it will never recover. Case in point: Reddit.
I appreciate that it's infrequent. Sure, it's fun to blow off some steam and have a laugh, but that's fundamentally not what this place is about. Confining it to Apple release threads makes it more of a purge scenario.
Thanks for pointing that out. I've shut down the stream for now. For those that want a demo, we're still hanging around in https://gg.hyperbeam.com/invite/w0c6n-Ko
Was honestly blown away by the responsiveness of the chat. At risk of getting carried away... I can't imagine this being anything short of a game-changer?
Also, any ideas how it responds so quickly to conversation? Seems like GPT 3.5-level speed with the awareness of 4+.