• @RonSijm@programming.dev
    link
    fedilink
    English
    19 months ago

    Well I have Copilot Pro, but I was mainly talking about GitHub Copilot. I don’t think having the Copilot Pro really affects Copilot performance.

    I meanly use AI for programming, and (both for myself to program and inside building an AI-powered product) - So I don’t really know what you intend to use AI for, but outside of the context of programming, I don’t really know about their performance.

    And I think Copilot Pro just gives you Copilot inside office right? And more image generations per day? I can’t really say I’ve used that. For image generation I’m either using the OpenAI API again (DALL-E 3), or I’m using replicate (Mostly SDXL)

    • @foggy@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      29 months ago

      I mainly use it for troubleshooting stuff, which includes everything from bash to node and react, Python to …DNS. idk.

      Copilot Pro, confusingly, isn’t GitHub copilot related. I do have GitHub copilot, I agree gpt4 is better in general, just not in my IDE.

      Idk how Microsoft has bungled this naming… They own GitHub now right?!

      So there’s Microsoft Copilot, which is like bing chat for windows. But now there is Microsoft Copilot Pro for $20/mo, which uses gpt4 turbo. Haven’t seen much on it.

      And even more recently, Google Bard is now Gemini, but you can do Gemini Ultra for $20/mo. Supposedly trying to contend with ChatGPT 4 as well.

      • @abhibeckert@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        English
        0
        edit-2
        9 months ago

        Idk how Microsoft has bungled this naming

        You haven’t followed been following Microsoft for long have you? The first version of Windows was version 3.0 (there were technically earlier versions but they were “a work in progress” and weren’t really usable at all). The third version of Xbox was called “Xbox One”.

        • @foggy@lemmy.world
          link
          fedilink
          English
          29 months ago

          I have been using Windows since before 3.0.

          Your point, while comical, is kind of irrelevant as far as naming two independent products the same thing.