OpenAI will roll out GPTs, customizable chatbots similar to ChatGPT, worldwide by the end of November via the GPT Store. Developers already created thousands of these GPTs in just a couple of weeks, and Gizmodo went through a lot of them to figure out the best ones you should check out.
These specialized chatbots do a wide range of tasks and could be the way most people interact with artificial intelligence. At this time, GPTs are only available to ChatGPT Plus subscribers, and signups are currently paused.
There are some incredibly useful GPTs out there, and several more useless ones. Here are our 10 favorites, ranked, and links for you to check them out when they drop.
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For fans of the show Silicon Valley from HBO, someone created the Not Hotdog app using ChatGPT’s image recognition technology. The Not Hotdog GPT works very well at identifying hot dogs, and identifying what is not a hot dog.
There was a real version of the app created in 2017, but fans of the show may amuse themselves once again with the ingenious application of our generation’s most advanced hardware and software.
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I’d be remiss not to mention the vast number of adventure game GPTs that are out there. There are numerous games like this one, but The Secret of Monkey Island: Amsterdam has certainly gained a small following. In the game, you are pirate William Van der Zee in a fictional Amsterdam, prompted with several paths to go down, all powered by ChatGPT. It’s a fun way to experience the power and vastness of large language models.
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Tattoo GPT is great for visualizing your tattoo ideas in a real design. I’ve been thinking about getting a tattoo combining my love of cows and the state where I went to college. I asked this GPT to combine my love for these two, and I got a pretty clean-looking result. The design at least gives you a starting point to take to a real tattoo artist, where you both can improve on the concept.
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Plant Doctor give you a quick diagnosis of your sickly plant simply by uploading a picture. For my case, the GPT quickly identified a fiddle leaf fig plant as having yellowing edges and white spots and diagnosed a treatment in no time.
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The DALL-E GPT is incredible and solves a very practical issue we run into all the time at Gizmodo. I asked DALL-E to make me an image of a “robot weatherman,” a concept Gizmodo reported on last week and needed a cover photo of. Our team constantly needs to find visual representations of concepts that don’t exist yet, as do teams in every industry.
DALL-E’s image generation services are not new, but having such an easy interface to utilize the technology is pretty incredible. This GPT lost some points in rankings because it’s repackaged technology from OpenAI, but this will surely be the way most people use DALL-E moving forward.
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The Cosmic Dream GPT will create visual representations of your dreams. I asked the GPT to visualize a dream world where robots and humans live harmoniously together. The product will give you an incredible, cosmically proportioned image, and bring your dreams and ideas to life.
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If you don’t have time for the 3 hour Huberman Lab podcasts, fear no more. Ask Dr. Huberman, the GPT version of the cold-plunge-promoting neurobiology professor with a popular health podcast, who is trained on every episode of Huberman Lab. Simply ask it questions specific to your health concerns, and you’ll get great concise answers.
I prompted the Huberman GPT: “I want to gain muscle but I only have 45 minutes a day to work. Is this possible?”
I was returned with concise clear answers and instructions for getting the most out of 45 minute muscle building workouts, packed with info from the podcast. I even asked the GPT to design me a workout plan for maximum gain with minimal effort, and it designed a pretty great workout plan that’s also quite doable. You can use this chatbot for a myriad of questions, such as getting answers about sleep, nutrition, exercise, and more.
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Elegant Logo Creator is a GPT to visualize your brand’s design needs with a clean aesthetic. I prompted this GPT to build me a logo for a Brooklyn-based tech blog, and it gave me this as the result. There’s no telling how many businesses and brands this GPT could be useful for.
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The Sous Chef GPT allows users to upload whatever ingredients they have in their fridge and will give you a recipe using all of them. I told this GPT I had black beans, ground beef, spinach and sweet potatoes on hand, and I was given a recipe for this: Black Bean Stuffed Sweet Potatoes. The GPT even gives you a DALL-E generated image conceptualizing the dish.
This is a very practical application, and though I did give the GPT an odd bunch of ingredients, it truly returned me a dish I could make that I never would have thought of. I imagine the countless people who are too tired to come up with recipe ideas after a long day at work, and how helpful Sous Chef could be.
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Designer GPT allows you to create websites simply by entering prompts. I entered three: “Design a webpage for a bakery,” “rename it Gizmodo Bakery and use blue color themes,” and “specify we make food for robots.”
I was thoroughly impressed with this one. It’s a practical solution for folks who don’t know how to build websites, and it’s a lot quicker than using Squarespace or Wix. You can customize these websites to no end with easy prompts, and ultimately attach your own domain.
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Source: Gizmodo