Images by Jernej Furman via Wikimedia Commons
It’s difficult to imagine the past few years without artificial intelligence, even if you don’t use it. Can you remember your last day without AI-related news items or social media posts? “If you see it in five or ten years, it seems like you’re in a world where AI tools are not normal.” I’m writing Justin Weinberg on Daily Nousoffering a more calm take. “We expect facilities with them and that expectation informs the social and professional norms that we all take, whether we like it or not.”
To an audience of philosophical scholars, Weinberg raises the question: Are you using AI? What’s more, “Are there any specific kind of tasks you want to learn how to use AI? Here at Open Culture, I’d like to ask readers like: Using AI in everyday life in a meaningful way If so, what do you use it for? Previously, we have covered applications such as Openai’s text-generating ChatGpt and image-generating Dall-E. Currently, tools that promise the “power of AI” are human. The efforts of the company are growing daily in an increasingly diverse field.
For many of us, AI, although very impressive, has been merely a technology to entertain ourselves so far. I personally rely heavily on the ideas I put in the prompts, but I have been laughing hard with AI-generated stories over the past year or two. Ta. But I have also heard the occasional stories of the true benefits that AI tools have brought to someone’s personal or professional life. Be careful to seek medical problems.
If you have any experience like that, please leave a comment on this post and tell us about them. Open culture readers say that “there can be true mileage from AI to summarise complex academic texts, translate historical documents, and explore philosophy, literature and science in greater depth. There is a sexuality: to produce “poetry, music, or visual art in the flow of historical and avant-garde styles.” Or, “Practice in a foreign language through translation, conversation, and grammar modification.” At least that’s what ChatGpt thinks. I look forward to reading your thoughts in the comments below.
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Based in Seoul Colin marshall Write and broadcasting stationTS about cities, languages, and culture. His projects include the Substack Newsletter Books about cities And the book The Stateless City: Walking through 21st century Los Angeles. Follow him on social networks previously known as Twitter @colinmarshall.