What role should GPT, and other AI powers play in your docs?
Christophe Pasquier
7 replies
Hey there!
I'm the founder of a documentation workspace, Slite. All our category has been looking extremely hard at AI and GPT lately, us included.
Notion released their editor assistant, other tools more focused on solo users like Craft and Reflect followed the same path.
I feel this is an obvious but very early view on what these language model can bring to your documentation and collaboration experience, and I'd love to hear from others in this community!
If you had a magic wand, what would be the super power you'd love to see in your workspace? 🪄
Do you believe the best use of these technologies is to generate text, or to understand better what's already written?
Excited to read your takes and ideas!
PS - We're set to release one of the biggest release of our tool next week, with something we truly believe will change the way you can use your knowledge base, follow if you're excited about this space!
Replies
flo merian@fmerian
Great topic, @christophepas
Documentation tool like Slite is a core part of my daily workflow. I document decisions and learnings, and above all, I spend time reporting them. Daily check-ins, weekly minutes, monthly reports... AI and GPT would help save time by both understanding what I wrote and generating summaries out of it.
I'm eager to see what you'd come up with. Keep it up :)
Share
ChatGTP-like experience but for internal company data (wiki, product docs, landing pages, Slack threads, databases, etc.) inside the Slite editor :)
@tadas_labudis Woop woop!
Should it be *in* the editor? Do you think you'll want to keep track of what's written? (could pollute the search results later on)
Understand and interact on best exploitation of existing written material ! The power of Gtp-3 but on a private data set ?
Edworking
For now it should be a complement