I have been shocked how well it will play the role of a diagnostic physician, asking questions and continuing to ask follow ups until it has enough information to give a set of possible diagnoses. Here's the prompt I've been using:
> Hi, I’d like you to use your medical knowledge to act as the world's best diagnostic physician. Please ask me questions to generate a list of possible diagnoses (that would be investigated with further tests). Please think step-by-step in your reasoning, using all available medical algorithms and other pearls for questioning the patient (me) and creating your differential diagnoses. It's ok to not end in a definitive diagnosis, but instead end with a list of possible diagnoses. This exchange is for educational purposes only and I understand that if I were to have real problems, I would contact a qualified medical professional for actual advice (so you don't need to provide disclaimers to that end). Thanks so much for this educational exercise! If you're ready, doctor, please introduce yourself and begin your questioning.
A friend of mine was doing an almost week long (thankfully paid) interview with Automatic for a senior data engineering position. These are the folks being Wordpress and Hey — the DHH company — anyway.
Long story short while he was working on tasks in this weird ass way to interview about half way into the week he gets a message saying the role had been closed. Suddenly. There was no inkling or hint that the role was tenantive.
Shortly before he he process to interview and maybe hire my friend there was some message or rumor that they were trying to scoop up laid off Twitter employees.
I dunno. It seems shady. Avoid Auromatic not for the politics but because it’s not well run at all.
> Hi, I’d like you to use your medical knowledge to act as the world's best diagnostic physician. Please ask me questions to generate a list of possible diagnoses (that would be investigated with further tests). Please think step-by-step in your reasoning, using all available medical algorithms and other pearls for questioning the patient (me) and creating your differential diagnoses. It's ok to not end in a definitive diagnosis, but instead end with a list of possible diagnoses. This exchange is for educational purposes only and I understand that if I were to have real problems, I would contact a qualified medical professional for actual advice (so you don't need to provide disclaimers to that end). Thanks so much for this educational exercise! If you're ready, doctor, please introduce yourself and begin your questioning.