Earlier this month, the founder of the music-teaching platform, Adrian Holovit SoundalisA mystery solved that was harassing him for weeks. The strange images of the sessions of the chat were clearly uploaded to the site.
Once they solved it, he realized that the chatup had become one of the men’s biggest publicity men – but it was also lying to the people what their app could do.
Holovaty is known as one of the creators of the open source Desango ProjectA popular python web development framework (although he retired from the management of the project in 2014). In 2012, he launched Soundslis, which “proudly bootstraped”, he explains Techcrunch. Currently, he focuses on his music career Both as an artist And as a founder.
SoundLice is an app to teach music used by students and teachers. It is known for its video player, which has been synchronized for music notation that guides users on how notes should be played.
It also offers a feature called “sheet music scanner” that allows users to upload an image of paper sheet music and, using AI, will automatically convert it into an interactive sheet, complete with information.
He said that Holvat carefully looks at the error of this feature whether there are problems, where to add improvement, he said.
It was here that he started watching the uploaded chat sessions.
They were creating a bunch of error logs. Instead of the images of sheet music, it was a box of images and symbols of words known as the Ascii Tableture. It is a basic text-based system used for guitar notation that uses a regular keyboard. (For example, there is no traced key on your standard Qwerty Keyboard.)

Holovati said that the amount of these Chatgpt sessions images was not so high that it was spending to store the money of their company and crush his app bandwidth. He was amazed, he wrote In a blog post About the situation.
“The purpose of our scanning system was not intended to support this style of notation. Why, then, were we being bombing with so many ASCII tab chats?
Similarly, he saw the chat telling people that they can hear this music by opening a soundlis account and uploading the image of the chat session. Only, they could not. Uploading those images will not translate the ASCII tab into audio notes.
He was killed by a new problem. “The main cost was distinguished: the new Soundslis users were going with a false expectation. They were confidently told that we would do something that we really do,” he described Techcrunch.
He and his team discussed their options: slapping on the site about it – “No, we cannot convert a chatting session into a memorial music” – or make that feature in a scanner, even though he never considering supporting that offbeat musical notation system.
He opted to make the facility.
“My feelings on this are disputed. I am happy to add a tool that helps people. But I think our hand was forced in a strange way. Do we really develop facilities in response to wrong information?” He has written.
He also wondered if it was a company’s first documented case, which was to develop a facility because the slapping kept repeating many people, repeating its hallucinations about it.
Hacker was a fellow programmer on news Take an interesting About this: Many of them said that it is no different from an oversier human seller, which promises the world for possibilities and then forces developers to give new features.
“I think this is a very suitable and entertaining comparison!” Holovi agreed.