I highlighted what I might have wanted to carry over to a more professional rewrite. (If the filename was real, I’d sanitize it so as not to single out any one employee, but I do think it’s an effective example.)

Using these powerful tools

is lazy, unprofessional, and could result in a catastrophically expensive, embarrassing mistake

if someone’s not careful :)

Source: Apple Intelligence on Apple.com


OK, this is kinda funny. I wanted to make sure I’d actually seen this in WWDC. Turns out they showed a different rewrite (embedded below):

I think I see what happened. The [macOS] rewrite shown is more 1:1, but comes out sounding goofy (very LLM). On their site, they didn’t want to show that, but then they used an [iOS] rewrite that missed e.g. the filename used as an example. Even someone skimming the email should see that filename was garbage and be afraid of getting called out in a meeting for typing a name like that in the future, so I think it’s a miss not to have it.

Not to make a mountain out of a small example or two, but I do hope folks are aware they’d do best to read every word of anything generated for them. Reminds me: I’m excited for that word-by-word suggestion feature as it allows for one-by-one modifications to be very intentionally made.

  • glimse@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    The right looks like an over-the-top business email I would send to my friend…as a joke. The only thing it’s missing is a reference to synergy.

    Like others are saying, I would ignore this email so fast.

    • Beeps@lemmy.world
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      17 days ago

      Not only is it writing the emails it’s going to read them and summarize them to the end user. That’s kind of crazy when you think about it.

      • glimse@lemmy.world
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        17 days ago

        It is crazy. It completely homogenizes communication by turning everything into generic business jargon mush.

        Nobody I know likes the soulless corporate culture, why would we want to write like HR?