Yeah but… i can look through 100 log lines manually faster than writing a good gpt prompt. This would get useful if I can easily paste like 1M lines of logs (a few minutes of data for us), but even if that would work, it’d be prohibitively expensive I think.
In other words, I still don’t completely grok the use case that’s being shared here.
The use case here is looking through logs for software that aren't familiar, especially stuff that gets touched too infrequently to internalize like, say, driver logs on a Linux workstation.
If it's faster for you to read the logs yourself, you should continue to do that. If it's bespoke personal or commercial software, chances are GPT isn't going to be trained on its meaning anyway.
Most people aren't going to be familiar with arbitrary ACPI errors. Most people would have to Google or ask GPT to even understand the acronym.
To add on it, sometimes adjacent logs can help to find solution, which by using the conventional google way, you'll need to analyze those yourself. With gpt, you don't need to, or they're helping you navigate on it.
In other words, I still don’t completely grok the use case that’s being shared here.