@Jay Walker Copilot(Sydney) is ok and is all most people need out of an AI. It's GPT under the hood, which Microsoft added their customizations for.
Because Microsoft tacks on their own restrictions and limitations to the GPT model, you'll run into those "Sorry, _______" a lot more often. If Microsoft was a parent and Copilot the child, the child knows it gets spankings were it to run its mouth. So instead of saying something that could even remotely be used against its parent like "Hey, what's up with your kid man? She just said [INSERTSOMETHINGBAD]" Sydney just doesn't. In this case it probably didn't want to give you something that could be interpreted as emergency procedure instructions or something.
In other words, if you choose to engage with Copilot(Sydney) you have to be extra patient when it can't answer something & get creative or re-ask it differently. Ima teach y'all how to properly interface with AI lmao.
Let me take it up many many many notches and show you how not all AI are equal.
Linked below is the 2-minute conversation I had with GPT o1-pro, where I asked for its AI thoughts on why you were getting the results you were, some recommendations from one powerful AI to you on what you could do better, and then finally its perspective on the miracle on the Hudson.
Shared via ChatGPT
chatgpt.com
Including the text on the Hudson part below since my GPT share links probably won't live forever & Astra's response was quite nice.
__________________________
From both an aviation and general public viewpoint, “The Miracle on the Hudson” is widely considered a miracle for a few key reasons:
Complete Dual Engine Failure
Right after takeoff, US Airways Flight 1549 flew through a flock of geese, causing both engines to fail almost simultaneously. A single-engine failure is already an emergency, but losing both engines immediately after departure leaves very few options. The fact that both engines shut down at low altitude and in a crowded airspace put the crew under intense pressure.
Successful Water Landing
Captain Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger and First Officer Jeffrey Skiles managed to ditch the plane onto the Hudson River—intact. Water landings (or “ditching”) are notoriously risky: if the aircraft hits the water at the wrong angle or speed, it can break apart, flip, or cause severe injuries. Yet in this case, the aircraft stayed relatively level and intact. While some passengers were injured, no one was lost.
No Fatalities
Even more remarkable is that all 155 people onboard survived. In aviation incidents, survival rates are typically much lower when you’re dealing with a complete loss of power over a heavily populated area. The fact that everyone walked (or swam) away changed the public’s perception of what was possible in an emergency.
Rapid Rescue
The Hudson River is busy with ferries and commercial traffic, which turned out to be a blessing: within minutes, multiple vessels converged on the floating airliner and rescued passengers from the freezing water. Had the crash occurred in a more remote region—or with slower rescue response—many more serious injuries or fatalities could have occurred.
Excellent Crew Performance Under Stress
Captain Sullenberger and his crew had only seconds to decide that landing in the Hudson River was the safest option. Instead of risking a turn back to LaGuardia (which could have ended in a disastrous stall over a densely populated area), Sullenberger weighed the risks and chose the river. This high-stakes decision-making, coupled with calm cockpit coordination, helped avert tragedy.
Public Narrative and Symbolism
Because it took place in New York City (with the event unfolding live on TV, surrounded by iconic landmarks), the Miracle on the Hudson caught the public imagination almost instantly. The safe outcome felt like a rare good-news story, especially given that aviation accidents are normally associated with catastrophic loss.
Put it all together, and you get what’s often deemed a “miracle”: a dire situation involving total engine loss that could easily have turned catastrophic, turned into an accident with zero fatalities. Add in Captain Sullenberger’s steady leadership and the swift ferry response, and it’s no surprise that it earned the label of a “miracle.”