
Posts about stuff relating to airports

Critical Review of (what was) Bird Strike Bot
Please note that Twitter killed the bot and then I deleted the account.
While in yesterday’s introduction of the Bird Strike Bot, I was proud of the work I undertook, with the help of ChatGPT, to build and deploy a Twitter bot, I still think it is worth taking a critical look at its first couple of weeks to see how well it is performing.
Short answer: 😐
Header image: Pavel Danilyuk (via Pexels)

Introducing (and then farewelling) 🦅✈️🤖
Much of my excitement associated with ChatGPT came from my early experimentation and the “success” of our first actual project. I’ve posted a few times now about Python programming, and in December, it helped me take it to a new level.
‘Cause, we built a bot. And then Twitter killed it and then I deleted its account.
Header image: Tara Winstead (via Pexels)