> If I Google "What's the capitol of Illinois", I might get the Wikipedia page on Illinois
Ten years ago, maybe. If you did it during the last decade, your search was probably served by a natural language parser which would serve up the answer from a facts database before searching the web. Just checked, and for me it says "Illinois / Capital: Springfield" with big bold betters, and below that are suggestions for picture searches for Illinois, and even further below that is the web search results of which Wikipedia is indeed the first.
This used to be incredibly frustrating for me, as someone who actually uses Google for searching documents, not as a facts database. But I've had a couple of years to accept that a) others are not like me, and b) to check Tools / Results / Verbatim.
This ChatGPT-will-kill-Google talk seems like a lot of nonsense. Google has natural language search. Not only is it what that their Assistant does, they've long ago pushed it on everyone via Search. That won't die in the hands of a language generator. ChatGPT is both excellent and fun, but not a search killer.
> Ten years ago, maybe. If you did it during the last decade, your search was probably served by a natural language parser which would serve up the answer from a facts database before searching the web. Just checked, and for me it says "Illinois / Capital: Springfield" with big bold betters, and below that are suggestions for picture searches for Illinois, and even further below that is the web search results of which Wikipedia is indeed the first.
Yes, and for anything that's more complicated than literally a lookup in a very common table ("list of US state capitals"), it's very common for Google to return Instant Answers that are either nonsensical or literally incorrect.
I've had Google tell me that ninjas are Portuguese, that the park is closed today because of rain (it is sunny and the "rain" refers to a day over three years ago), and other stuff which sounds correct, and is presented as correct information, but objectively is not.
The capital of Illinois is Springfield (1)(2). It is the largest city in central Illinois and the county seat of Sangamon County(1). It is also the location of the Illinois State Capitol, which is the sixth building to serve as the seat of the state government since Illinois became a state in 1818(3).
Ten years ago, maybe. If you did it during the last decade, your search was probably served by a natural language parser which would serve up the answer from a facts database before searching the web. Just checked, and for me it says "Illinois / Capital: Springfield" with big bold betters, and below that are suggestions for picture searches for Illinois, and even further below that is the web search results of which Wikipedia is indeed the first.
This used to be incredibly frustrating for me, as someone who actually uses Google for searching documents, not as a facts database. But I've had a couple of years to accept that a) others are not like me, and b) to check Tools / Results / Verbatim.
This ChatGPT-will-kill-Google talk seems like a lot of nonsense. Google has natural language search. Not only is it what that their Assistant does, they've long ago pushed it on everyone via Search. That won't die in the hands of a language generator. ChatGPT is both excellent and fun, but not a search killer.