Can anyone who knows about archery explain the asymmetry between the upper and lower parts of the bow?
No archery experience, but am mechE. Hold your hand out as if to hold an imaginary bow. The handle is tilted forward because that how your hand sits naturally. There isn’t much asymmetry besides the handle tilt.
I just assumed it was damaged (bent) because it is steel. But it could have also been for use on horseback, where the bottom of the bow is usually a tad bit shorter to make it easier to handle.
Yes, please. I’m also curious how these metal bows stacked up to traditional bows of the period.
I figured I’d throw that question to GPT, but instead of pasting an enormous wall of text here, I’ll just try to summarise:
- Metal bows of the 19th were much rarer and more costly.
- They had the advantage of being super-durable, resistant to moisture, and being able to be stored for long periods of time, say in a guardhouse.
- They originated in regions like India, Persia, and sometimes parts of the Middle East.
- Typically heavier and less flexible than wood.
- They often served symbolic or ceremonial roles.
- In India, steel bows had a long tradition, often tied to Rajput and Mughal warfare and status display.
EDIT: Hahaha, yes indeed-- bring on the swift, angry downvotes! Let the HATE flow through you! ^^ [my personal hero]
This should be a top level comment since you didn’t come close to answering the comment above you.
Also. Nobody wants to see your ChatGPT results.
I didn’t try to answer the comment above. I upvoted it, seconded the request, then added on with another query about the bow.
Nobody’s forcing you to read the GPT output. I simply condensed what I found for readability and offered it up for the purposes of anyone’s curiosity. FWIW, so far my hand-searches indeed seem to confirm the results above.
And yeah, sure, I get that LLM AI’s can hallucinate results at times, but I consider this a pretty straight-ahead kind of query, one in which I’ve found LLM’s highly useful in the past.
Also, there’s a rather well-known aspect of the internet in that one of the best ways to test knowledge and get it swiftly corrected is to post or comment with flawed info. So that’s another thing I was curious about-- did GPT’s findings make the grade in this case? Yet reason I specifically added on to the comment above, since they were asking for an archery-experienced person to opine.
Hope you have a better day going forward.
Then why bother posting it, getting offended, and defending yourself? Just why? No one needs to waste their time scrolling past the literal garbage of a reposted gpt response.
Offended? You and the other person seem to be doing a great job of that all by yourselves, lol
No one needs to waste their time scrolling past the literal garbage of a reposted gpt response.
For the record, I didn’t “repost” anything. I formulated the query, tweaked it, improved it, got the best results I deemed possible, then heavily edited it down in to something quick and comprehensible. Did a couple quick hand-queries which seemed to confirm the GPT results, then decided to add it to my comment, just for Gits & Shiggles.
What I do find amusing, however, is that you two are reacting as if I’d loudly trumpeted “AND HERE ARE THE DEFINITE RESULTS FROM OUR NEW GOD.”
Also worth a good chortle is you acting as if social media is intrinsically meant to be chock full of the highest-quality, fact-checked results, when you know perfectly well it never was and never will be.
Indeed, I’d put money on the modern AI response performing better in terms of facts & reality than the average social media users’. I don’t think it would even be close, really, as most popular threads are typically overflowing with BS and bad jokes, as you should well know… oh! Unless of course you’re completely new to the medium!!
Which it sounds like you are. In which case-- WELCOME. 😀
Oh, and just for the record-- I despise the dangers of AI, personally, and am hugely concerned about it destroying jobs and possibly even worse. I don’t trust it for a minute, yet at the same time, don’t mind taking advantage of it for very simple, innocuous queries like this.
Again, I hope you two have a better day. And again, we welcome you, kindly. ^^
Offended? Annoyed is a better description. Social media is meant to be organic and with that comes inaccuracies. I don’t mind the inaccurate nature of GenAi but it’s not contributive. It’s low effort, and it doesn’t belong in the medium. You would have been better off posting it at the top level instead of piggybacking on a different thread. You even seem to use – in the way people did in the era of typewriters. Adapting AI outputs is changing the landscape of these spaces for the worse.
It sounds like you should add “less condescending” to your prompts from now on.
Yeah, I already explained the full range of reasons why I added the comment above, regardless of anyone’s petty attempt to characterise my comment as ‘simply copying and stealing AI.’
It sounds like you should add “less condescending” to your prompts from now on.
Which again highlights the response above, i.e. welcome to the internet, my friend.
Bonus pts for the idea that: maybe just maybe, if you’re being an obnoxious a-hole in life, people just miiiiight not treat you with the customary politeness that you’re otherwise due?
Or did you want a special exemption in this case?
Hahahaha…
The antelope-head tips are badass.