Is it capable of determining whether or not it’s even a debugging question and thus needs any of the feedback indicators? (the sample question may be just such a question...)
Is this really just replacing the stuff in the right column? wouldn’t an analog step based wizard do just as well, without the overhead of bringing in ML/LLM to do what a radio button would do?
After testing this, it... doesn't seem to really do anything interesting/useful. I gave it a question that was well received, and it more or less gave me incorrect suggestions repeatedly. It misinterpreted what I was asking and recommended me remove something my question didn't have both initially and when I clicked refresh.
My interpretation of this test is a model was trained on common responses from curators in SG or common suggestions from improvement that were pulled from elsewhere and then was instructed to give suggestions with the question as context. It does definitely attempt to make the suggestion relevant to the question being asked, but it doesn't seem to actually produce suggestions that are relevant to the question being asked, rather, it provides suggestions that may be broadly relevant to many questions that might get asked with a few injections of details from the question... which I'd argue isn't better than regular old guidelines for asking questions.
It might be correct occasionally... but the guidelines are always correct.
Here's an example response:
While the goal of my question was preventing browser timeouts... that's not what the question was asking about, I was asking why a particular feature that solves the specific problem I was having wasn't working the way it should in a specific browser. This was clearly explained in the question (and lead to a quick answer.) While file uploads were the reason I asked this question, i left file uploads out of the question sample code entirely because they weren't necessary to recreate the problem... so the suggestions to do so were nonsense. (it also didn't seem to notice that it was a 1:1 duplicate... but it's not built to do that.)
Now, arguably, this was a poor test of the feature because i provided it with a known good question and maybe if presented with a common low quality question it would provide more relevant suggestions... but, again, simple guidelines would have none of these problems.
Asking the user 1-3 questions prior to allowing them to ask a question to get information about what they're hoping to get an answer for would go a long way toward reducing the number of invalid questions that reach the SG and/or homepage by instead directing users to the correct place for them before they even fill in the title.