TimeGPT simplifies date and time conversions all in a centralized application. Calculate time between the present or past/future dates, find times in other time zones, and more. Try TimeGPT today and streamline your time!
Hey all!
A common task I run into while working on my day to day job always involves the following:
- Correlating logs for multiple services which may or may not be in the time zone that I am currently in for any investigation or incident.
- Checking to see what time it is at a team or colleague's location.
- Estimating time and dates in the past and the future for planning and cost calculation.
Maybe I'm not that efficient, but I always found myself searching and visiting multiple different websites just to answer these questions. Each website either only deals with time, only deals with dates, have some weird formatting for entry, etc. All this is such a drag on getting shit done.
Introducing, ✨TimeGPT✨. I made this over a weekend to test out Next.js 13's new features and ChatGPT's API. There are a couple kinks here and there. The accuracy of the results are mostly good, but they are all subject to the limitation of gpt-3.5-turbo which will get better over time. Anyway, hope you all enjoy and feel free to leave feedback for any improvements! 💎
@hudididudidi Lately, I've found myself needing to check the time abroad, and it's a hassle to search all over the place. Thanks for creating such a useful tool!
@hudididudidi Hey Stanley, I really want to join your team and help you guys as a developer! I sent a connection invitation on Linkedin! (Hasan Safarli)
I used ChatGPT in the past trying to convert times. So theoretically this would be a good project. Unfortunately, I have never had a good experience. So far it was never correct! Even now it changed its responses a couple of times, with the closest being 1 hour too early (e.g. "What is the time in Sydney/Australia?", Result: 5pm even though its 6pm). It's much simpler and more accurate to prompt Google instead.
@enrico_stahn This is indeed something I ran into while building this out. There are some limitations with using GPT for this. Hopefully with some more tuning I can increase the accuracy of the responses somewhat, but much of the work to improve the accuracy falls on OpenAI.
It's an interesting idea, but in application it is not really usable.
Some prompts will get a working result one time, and an error message a second later. An example "current unix timestamp" will sometimes get me the current UNIX timestamp, and about half the time "Sorry, as an AI language model, I cannot generate current unix timestamp since it is dependent on the current time and date in your timezone. However, if you provide me with a specific time or date relative to today and a timezone to convert to, I can provide you with the corresponding time and date in the requested timezone."
If you hit enter more than once, you end up with the output of those two queries being mixed into each other. Using the same prompt as above "current unix timestamp" with enter hit twice with a second between, I get "I do not have access to real-timeSorry, data as and an cannot AI provide language current model timestamps,. I However do not, have if access you to give the me current a unix specific timestamp time as or it requires date real relative to-time interaction today with the and system a. timezone However to, convert I to can, convert I unix can provide timestamps to you readable with dates the and corresponding times time if and you date provide me in with the one requested. timezone." Which is two instances of the error message woven together awkwardly.
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