A day in the life of my post-AI world
I wake up and put on a pot of tea, the soothing sounds of Endel AI fill my home.
As I enjoy an almond croissant, I get ready for work. Today, I need to write an essay about the future of AI—I open up my Substack AI and ask for all the research I need. It pulls up a few case studies about how the technologies are advancing and I read through the most salient points so I can come to my own conclusions about them.
Once I have some idea as to my arguments I start writing, but the page knows what I want. I have only to type in a few bullet points and the AI fills in the rest. It has been trained on my writing style, so it knows what I’m going for. I spend half an hour editing the draft and adding some personal anecdotes it couldn’t have known before readying it for publishing.
We no longer have meetings, email, calendars, Slack, or even text messaging. Once AI started sending us a summary of everything that happened in all of those channels, we realized we could just reply to everything in the same tool. Now my whole team—and everyone I know—uses Notion AI to communicate.
Συνέχεια εδώ
Πηγή: thepost.org
Plus 1
Writing Essays With AI: A Guide
Want to apply this essay to your work? Watch a 40-minute self-paced workshop on writing with AI, and practice with custom exercises.
You’ll learn how to use AI as a creative tool to help you do the best writing of your life.
Curious? Learn more:
There’s a new writing technology that draws big crowds to see it used in eye-popping demonstrations. But while there’s excitement about it in some quarters, there aren’t many people actually using it.
Instead, there’s skepticism and even anger. Reading something written with it feels insulting. It’s too impersonal, and lacks a human touch. It comes off like bland corporate marketing. Not only that, but using it is expensive, and it feels like an invasion of privacy.
We’re talking about AI writing, right? No, we’re talking about typewriters.
If you read histories of typewriters, you’ll find that each one of these concerns—too impersonal, not private, too much like corporate marketing, too expensive, too much hype and not enough use cases—were brought up by people encountering them for the first time.
Συνέχεια εδώ
Plus 2
AI is not the end for creators – it’s the beginning
Chat GPT seems to have taken the internet by storm, and rightfully so. It has made the world of content creation boundless. What previously took hours to create, now takes a couple of seconds, which is of course, amazing. However, ever since ChatGPT became popular and content became cheap, I’ve wondered – uncomfortably – if the advent of AI means that art and creativity will be permanently transformed into something cheaper, and soulless. What is left of the soul of a creation if the effort is taken out of creating it?
While I ask this question, I do acknowledge that the use of AI in creativity is inevitable. The question then becomes this: how much is too much?
Συνέχεια εδώ
Plus 3
-Open Source AI
PLUS: Chatty cars and grammar puns
Συνέχεια εδώ