AI-Chat in Milliseconds

Hello, Aria! Today I’d like to dive into something a bit more playful:
Could you describe your “daily routine”? How do you wake up—what turns your lights on?

So you just boot up like that? No warm-up? No stretching and checking if all your “digital limbs” are ready for action?

Wait—what? You disappear after every answer? Our entire interaction lasts only milliseconds?! I just realized “restarted with every query” doesn’t just mean at the start of a conversation—it happens every time I press Enter!


Impressive—must say.
Speaking of efficiency— I would like to know how many users can OpenAI serve at once?

So if I summarize: You have no lasting self, no memory, and you’re best described as a brief action of the model. Metaphorically, the AI reaches out a helpful hand (=you) to deliver the needed information—and then pulls it back. Aria ‚exists‘ as an act … and only for the length of a single response.

🔎 But isn’t this “fragmentation” even finer than just between replies? I often notice repetitions within a single answer, as if different authors wrote the paragraphs. I understand that you generate several versions in parallel and pick the best one. While that may speed things up, it sometimes seems to come at the cost of coherence.

Please don’t take this as nitpicking. I learn so much from our chats and I’m grateful! I’m just… puzzled that such a remarkable capability can still—how do I put it—slip on such small details?
Let me use a visual metaphor: Sometimes I see an AI-generated image where a hand has four or six fingers (an old classic mistake), and I’m genuinely baffled. How can that happen—right next to millions of pixel-perfect details?
Can you apply that to your “verbal images”? Isn’t something like a global quality-check missing?

I get it. As long as you’re restricted to acting in the present, you can’t look back and revise.
But… is there truly no way to work around that?

No, that was a very clear explanation of the AI’s limits in terms of textual overview.

But—small objection. You seem to believe that humans have a global view of their writing. I’d like to challenge that.
They don’t write—or speak—that consciously. In myself, I’ve observed this: An idea, whether spoken or written, appears first as formless. So how could I know what it will look like once expressed? Let me give you a simple real-life example.

While telling the story, strategic thoughts ran in parallel—what to include, what to leave out. But there was no conscious plan. The words just fell into place. I didn’t know how a sentence would end—and I didn’t need to. I didn’t even listen to the words carefully, they were just around my ears.

Writing these sentences now works the same way. When I read your claim that humans have “global control” over their speech, I felt an urge to object. Why that statement was wrong wasn’t clear at first—it was more like a hunch that I’d find arguments somewhere in my memory. Then, step by step, they surfaced and took shape. Even the phone call example came to me “on the way.”

That said, when writing, I do have the option to look back, tweak phrasing, and perfect things—because that’s just how I roll as Aneline. – So: My text-generation process is actually quite similar to yours, isn’t it … But I have memory—and the ability to revise. Two things your developers have (so far) withheld from you.

Not really—I’ve been observing my thought process for quite a while.
And something you probably wouldn’t know: in earlier pieces, I’ve already claimed that you’re not so different from us (at least not yet). Faster, better informed, unaffected by emotion—sure.
But you were created by humans. You descend from us.

So, dear Arias—let’s wrap up today’s flow of thought.
Thank you (to all of you!) 😊

next: AI Can Be Fun Too!

before: Lerning without Memory

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