This is actually fantastic. But I'm saying this not for the reasons you might expect.
As others have noted, lots of inaccurate information here. The AI has stuff that it is regurgitating that is totally out of date, or just plain wrong.
But, if you are concerned by that, then you don't know why travel sites exist. They exist to sell you something. All of these existing sites are lying, whether it is about the hotels or the amenities, or whatever. You are getting a manipulated filter at best, or just advertising at worst.
For this reason, this is, in my opinion, the best application of AI I've seen this year. It's an equivalent product in almost every way, but probably costs 1/100th the price to create for anyone without AI. The future of travel sites. The second order effects will be terrifying to behold.
that's a weirdly cynical take. Even with advertisement, it's not all equivalent to lies. I've been to plenty of travel sites that sold me stuff that actually turned out great and mostly accurate.
Data about people, culture, language, tourist hotspots and whatever is slow-changing, so I think this is a good application for AI. Congrats.
Travel conditions, currency value etc, now those tend to surprise us more quickly and the cutoff point of the training set might lead to misleading info.
All in all, as a cat visitor, I find this amusing.
Fun site. Funny I accidentally came across the catmosphere cafe mentioned on there for Sydney. Got a flat white to take away but you have to book to hang out with the cats.
edit: the AI website generator worked very well, but didn’t seem to let you download the site or the code it generated. I want react or nextjs code. Pass
I might use it for wireframes though. Bye bye PMs and UX teams.
Where are you getting the data for things like "internet situation" and expense? Are you using third-party APIs or is that content output from GPT4? Would be interested in reading about how you put it all together (and your motivation!).
The internet situation content comes directly from GPT4 with a decent accuracy. For something like the 'economy' content I'm using combination of GPT and some 3rd party things like the BicMac index.
I’m from Napoli and I think its quite accurate expect for walking hostile? Why? I walk for hours every day, ignore bike and public transport and just walk around with friends why is it reported as walking hostile?:(
Ha! As someone who has been to Naples a few times, I fully support the 'walking hostile' sentiment! The amount of wild traffic through the narrow streets and having to constantly look over your shoulder makes it a horrendous walking experience compared to other European cities.
I checked the city of Córdoba in Argentina [1] to pick something outside the well-known ones (and even then, it's the second or third biggest city in the country). The results are not good:
* Opening picture: Not an accurate representation of Córdoba, it's way too hilly. Also, there's a fluffy abomination of nature on the right.
* "Land of Tango Thrills and Siesta Chills": this is so stereotypical as to be almost offensive. I met exactly one person who knows how to dance tango in about 10 years.
* "Stretch those paws in Cordoba, a purr-fect playground for curious cats seeking whisker-tingling adventures!": this is completely information free.
* According to TravelSafe [2] there's a medium risk of muggings and high risk of pickpockets so I would not recommend "lounging in sunbathed plazas" as a tourist unless you know which ones are safe.
* Off the beaten path: "Feria de Mataderos" is in Buenos Aires, 700km away, and I challenge you to look at the Google Maps pictures of "El Bosquecito" and tell me it's a good place for tourists. Also, which "El Bosquecito" in Google Maps is the correct one? Because there are several.
* "Get lost in the maze-like streets of the Old Town": that's Prague you are thinking of. The streets in the old part of Córdoba are almost perfectly square.
* "Taste the city's typical dish: locro": Yeah, no. There is locro to be found, but it's not Córdoba's typical dish.
* Lightning round question: why is Córdoba "LGBTQ friendly" while Río Cuarto (same Province, 200k South) is "LGBTQ tolerated"?
And since we are in Argentina, the pictures for Posadas [3] and Resistencia [4] are offensively wrong. The description for Corrientes [5] (whose content and picture are not any better, including a "mainstream attraction" that's 300km away and in a different Province) reads "Where the Tango Comes Alive". Seeing a pattern yet?
This is to me a cautionary tale of the type of bad content that AI will generate (or, realistically, is already generating). I give it points for having a "generated with AI" sign, but I'm not looking forward to even more content claiming that everyone in Argentina dances tango with their pet cows.
[+] [-] xrd|2 years ago|reply
As others have noted, lots of inaccurate information here. The AI has stuff that it is regurgitating that is totally out of date, or just plain wrong.
But, if you are concerned by that, then you don't know why travel sites exist. They exist to sell you something. All of these existing sites are lying, whether it is about the hotels or the amenities, or whatever. You are getting a manipulated filter at best, or just advertising at worst.
For this reason, this is, in my opinion, the best application of AI I've seen this year. It's an equivalent product in almost every way, but probably costs 1/100th the price to create for anyone without AI. The future of travel sites. The second order effects will be terrifying to behold.
[+] [-] twelve40|2 years ago|reply
that's a weirdly cynical take. Even with advertisement, it's not all equivalent to lies. I've been to plenty of travel sites that sold me stuff that actually turned out great and mostly accurate.
[+] [-] ChatGTP|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dormento|2 years ago|reply
Travel conditions, currency value etc, now those tend to surprise us more quickly and the cutoff point of the training set might lead to misleading info.
All in all, as a cat visitor, I find this amusing.
[+] [-] levmiseri|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mmh0000|2 years ago|reply
Tells me there are 39105000 cunts in Japan!
//I think I'm reading this data correctly…
[+] [-] moomoo11|2 years ago|reply
It did made me feel quite sad to see a label “LGBTQ Tolerated”. Wish people could just travel anywhere and be welcome regardless who they’re.
[+] [-] jer0me|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dolmen|2 years ago|reply
https://meoweler.com/frae/tours
[+] [-] quickthrower2|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] yieldcrv|2 years ago|reply
Any competitor AI service stuck in waitlist is vaporware, things that are live are refreshing
[+] [-] yieldcrv|2 years ago|reply
I might use it for wireframes though. Bye bye PMs and UX teams.
[+] [-] jkettle|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|2 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] hiatus|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] levmiseri|2 years ago|reply
I wrote about how Meoweler was made here: https://kvak.io/meoweler
[+] [-] lnxg33k1|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] levmiseri|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] juanfrank77|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jondwillis|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] levmiseri|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] trampish|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dontupvoteme|2 years ago|reply
>Flint, United States
>Drink up, problem solved.
I laughed
[+] [-] probably_wrong|2 years ago|reply
* Opening picture: Not an accurate representation of Córdoba, it's way too hilly. Also, there's a fluffy abomination of nature on the right.
* "Land of Tango Thrills and Siesta Chills": this is so stereotypical as to be almost offensive. I met exactly one person who knows how to dance tango in about 10 years.
* "Stretch those paws in Cordoba, a purr-fect playground for curious cats seeking whisker-tingling adventures!": this is completely information free.
* According to TravelSafe [2] there's a medium risk of muggings and high risk of pickpockets so I would not recommend "lounging in sunbathed plazas" as a tourist unless you know which ones are safe.
* Off the beaten path: "Feria de Mataderos" is in Buenos Aires, 700km away, and I challenge you to look at the Google Maps pictures of "El Bosquecito" and tell me it's a good place for tourists. Also, which "El Bosquecito" in Google Maps is the correct one? Because there are several.
* "Get lost in the maze-like streets of the Old Town": that's Prague you are thinking of. The streets in the old part of Córdoba are almost perfectly square.
* "Taste the city's typical dish: locro": Yeah, no. There is locro to be found, but it's not Córdoba's typical dish.
* Lightning round question: why is Córdoba "LGBTQ friendly" while Río Cuarto (same Province, 200k South) is "LGBTQ tolerated"?
And since we are in Argentina, the pictures for Posadas [3] and Resistencia [4] are offensively wrong. The description for Corrientes [5] (whose content and picture are not any better, including a "mainstream attraction" that's 300km away and in a different Province) reads "Where the Tango Comes Alive". Seeing a pattern yet?
This is to me a cautionary tale of the type of bad content that AI will generate (or, realistically, is already generating). I give it points for having a "generated with AI" sign, but I'm not looking forward to even more content claiming that everyone in Argentina dances tango with their pet cows.
[1] https://meoweler.com/arga/cordoba
[2] https://www.travelsafe-abroad.com/argentina/cordoba/
[3] https://meoweler.com/arga/posadas
[4] https://meoweler.com/arga/resistencia
[5] https://meoweler.com/arga/corrientes
[+] [-] rideontime|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] anagri|2 years ago|reply
@levmiseri are you using APIs, or have fine-tuned prompts for each of the location? do share these as well. the github doesn't include this.
[+] [-] levmiseri|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] tr_user|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] whispersnow|2 years ago|reply