Levente Andras wrote:with the emergence of AI, suddenly I'm given the opportunity to ask complex, potentially difficult, and very specialised questions on ANY topic, and - within seconds - to obtain answers / solutions that are relevant, reliable, and tailored / specific to my own situation (climate, exact location, soil type, etc.).
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I learn from the mistakes of others who take my advice.
"The genius of American farm experts is very well demonstrated here: they can take a solution and divide it neatly into two problems." -Wendell Berry
Invasive plants are Earth's way of insisting we notice her medicines. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Everyone learns what works by learning what doesn't work. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Levente Andras wrote:... specific to my own situation (climate, exact location, soil type, etc.).
Visit Redhawk's soil series: https://permies.com/wiki/redhawk-soil
How permies.com works: https://permies.com/wiki/34193/permies-works-links-threads
Anne Miller wrote:There is nothing better than learning from someone with dirt under there fingernails.
Real dirt not fake dirt.
Stick with information from known sources.
Libraries are full of book by leading authorities.
And I urge you to please notice when you are happy, and exclaim or murmur or think at some point, 'If this isn't nice, I don't know what is.'
-Kurt Vonnegut
Living, learning and growing day-by-day
Alex Howell wrote:If you ever want to lose faith in AI, just ask it questions about things you're a specialist in...
Douglas Alpenstock wrote:
there is more to AI than LLM's. Outside of the current hype, it seems there are small AI's in radiology, astronomy, chemistry, being trained specifically on hard and proven scientific data. The analyzing potential is astonishing; and I suspect these are the AI models that will matter to us all.
Living, learning and growing day-by-day
Christopher Weeks wrote:
People on Permies can be wrong too. Or their experience in a Mediterranean climate doesn't shed much light on how things will work for me up north. But it isn't ever tricking me into trusting that it's anything more than it is.
Jay Angler wrote:
Levente Andras wrote:... specific to my own situation (climate, exact location, soil type, etc.).
I'm not sure AI will be right about all those things.
There's a permie living only about 15 km south of me. Their farm is further from salt water, at a higher elevation, but likely has similar soil. Their weather and growing experience is *very* different from mine.
The difficult answer is that you need to get a whole lot of people in your region to study and start practicing permaculture! Developing a varied and deep local data base seems like the better medium term plan.
r ransom wrote:
The other big issue is the cost of using ai. My query above took about .3 to .5wh that's almost 30 min on my led light bulb.
Given how many power supply companies depend on oil and gas, and with global events of march 2026, the price of running ai is about to skyrocket. They will probably move to the next phase where they get the customers to pay for it sooner than expected. Although I suspect they were hoping to get more people addicted before that.
AI is not currently sustainable and wicked icky for the environment.
Christopher Weeks wrote:Has anyone ever asked one of these LLMs for information and had it just say "I don't know" or something to that effect? I haven't had that happen, which seems kind of weird.
Living, learning and growing day-by-day
Cristobal Cristo wrote:AI is only as good as the multitude pseudo gardening/DYI websites loaded with ads from which AI takes its information. These websites are copies of each other in terms of contents and usually very vague and generic. Because I'm interested in empirical knowledge of real persons and things that work I use Permies as the reference and basically get serious information only from forums from real people with experience. The good thing is that sometimes AI uses Permies as the source, but at the end nobody will guarantee the answer is correct or some algorithmic delusion. I was disappointed so many times on specific questions related to IT or engineering that gave plain wrong answers that I can only imagine that the solutions to more abstract topics may be equally wrong. If AI had robots in all parts of the world that would be doing gardening, building, developing within local conditions and materials THEN it would have some merit.
Anne Miller wrote:There is nothing better than learning from someone with dirt under there fingernails.
Real dirt not fake dirt.
Stick with information from known sources.
Libraries are full of book by leading authorities.
Levente Andras wrote:"that's how it's done" or "that's how my granddad taught me".
I learn from the mistakes of others who take my advice.
John F Dean wrote:Hi Tereza,
You approach a good point. God knows I have an ample amount of grey hairs, but every once in a while I think about the way I have always done things …or how I was told to do things 60 years ago…and I make a post asking for advice. Very often I learn a new way (for me) of doing the task.
It would seem that no matter what the job in, there are legit alternative approaches out there.
"The genius of American farm experts is very well demonstrated here: they can take a solution and divide it neatly into two problems." -Wendell Berry
Christopher Weeks wrote:Has anyone ever asked one of these LLMs for information and had it just say "I don't know" or something to that effect? I haven't had that happen, which seems kind of weird.
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r ransom wrote:
When I ask AI for gardening solutions, they all speak with absolute certainty of the correct method - most of which I've tried and found wanting.
Before asking the question, I provide as much background as I can, including what I already know on the topic
Douglas Alpenstock wrote:And leading authorities who write books are mindful that they, and their publishers, can be sued for providing grossly incorrect and dangerous information. How about AI?
Invasive plants are Earth's way of insisting we notice her medicines. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Everyone learns what works by learning what doesn't work. Stephen Herrod Buhner
r ransom wrote:
Before asking the question, I provide as much background as I can, including what I already know on the topic
Sounds like growing the vegetables would be faster.
But I've only tested AI against areas I'm considered an expert in (people pay me to teach) or can check against expert advice. I found it has the same (mis)information as blogs and most of the internet. It seems to be only as good as the data set. But it's worth testing every few months.
I've tried several free ai. The closest to accurate information so far has been the one proton mail provides, but still errors and some are dangerous. It did create a pretty cool yoga routine that I ran past my doctor before trying. The doctor removed two of the positions as it would cause more problems than it solved. The ai took about 2 hours of back and forth to get a routine that it felt would fit my lifestyle and needs. The doctor took under a min to see the harmful elements that woild make my health worse.
One can never be too kind to oneself or others.
Philip McGarvey wrote:I'd rather LLMs didn't exist but while they do they can be useful for finding information. Some kinds of information are hard to find with a normal google search but LLMs can find them easily. (Google often gives lots of fluff websites rather than original sources)
Still, take care not to replace human connections with LLMs. I respect anyone who chooses to stay off the internet and learn from real people, or goes in that direction in some way. Meanwhile, to the degree we do use the internet to find information, LLMs are useful, and there are a variety of ways to use them. Getting them to give direct links to original sources is the most useful I think.
For anything that's likely been discussed on permies I'd start by googling "site:permies.com blah blah".
For example, I recently successfully convinced a friend to put in a wood floor instead of vinyl floor. I Googled site:permies.com vinyl floor and read all the discussions that seemed relevant. I also queried an LLM with "how long does vinyl flooring last, and does it shed toxic compounds into the room? give direct links to sources for all the information you give"
Other example LLM queries:
"give me five direct links to pdf of the manual for ______" And then I have the manual. For a quick follow up I can give the pdf of the manual back to the LLM and say "give me exact quotes with page numbers for everything this manual says about ____"
Or e.g. troubleshooting a chainsaw there's a lot of information out there that won't be in manuals and the LLM can be very handy for giving next steps for what to try. I could have made a post somewhere like arboristsite but it might take some time for useful replies to come in, and they might be mixed with people mocking me for not intuitively knowing what to do without asking. I troubleshoot a lot of mechanical/tech things and I don't want to invest the time to become a thorough expert on all of them, LLMs are really useful here.
Or "are there people out there who think ____, and what do they say about it? (even if they're kooky that's OK) Give direct links to places where they're talking about it"
Or "give me direct links to pdfs of five scientific papers that discuss _____" And again, give the pdf of the paper back with "give exact quotes and page numbers where this paper explains or shows data on _____"
At the moment, LLMs are not yet completely full of ads and stuff. I imagine this will change rapidly and they might become far less useful. But at the moment it's a relatively distraction-free way to find info from the internet in a simple text format with links to relevant original sources.
Levente Andras wrote:
Anne Miller wrote:There is nothing better than learning from someone with dirt under there fingernails.
Real dirt not fake dirt.
I'm not sure I can agree with the first part. There are so many people "with dirt under their fingernails" whose only rationale for doing things in a certain way is "because that's how it's done" or "that's how my granddad taught me".
Invasive plants are Earth's way of insisting we notice her medicines. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Everyone learns what works by learning what doesn't work. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Levente Andras wrote:
Anne Miller wrote:There is nothing better than learning from someone with dirt under there fingernails.
Real dirt not fake dirt..
I'm not sure I can agree with the first part. There are so many people "with dirt under their fingernails" whose only rationale for doing things in a certain way is "because that's how it's done" or "that's how my granddad taught me". They refuse to learn new ways and methods, and they refuse te see how the world around them has changed, and how those changes have rendered their way of doing things no longer appropriate. I'm not talking about abstract cases, but very concrete and specific ones, that I've had to deal with over the past 15 years or so. Very painful!
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