AI

    It’s like Grandpa used to say, “It’s worth taking a few extra minutes to get clear on your moral compass once your hammer and saw begin making decisions on your behalf.”

    I asked ChatGPT to always remember Asimov’s 3 Laws of Robotics and apply them to any responses it gives me.

    If it ever thinks one of the Laws will prevent it from answering fully, I asked it to point this out and explain the violation.

    Just a totally normal Wednesday morning.

    My first insight into AI’s genuine utility came when I asked ChatGPT to tell me how an unfamiliar Python library worked, as if I were a young child.

    Even if its answer had been wrong - like an ill-advised coworker - it gave enough insight to remove my block and keep moving forward.

    (But it wasn’t.)

    I’m pretty sure that asking an AI to create complex regular expressions based upon your conversations should be a specific part of the Turing test.

    “In the old days, children had to memorize many irrelevant things they didn’t understand, but they also didn’t have a concept of their future then. Thanks to AI, the information in their lives is no longer so disconnected, so random.”

    -Kai-fu Lee

    #Quotes

    “I think computer viruses should count as life. I think it says something about human nature that the only form of life we have created so far is purely destructive. We’ve created life in our own image.”

    -Stephen Hawking

    I do I wonder what he would have thought about ChatGPT.

    #Quotes

    I asked ChatGPT (3.5) to tell me how to be the best possible product manager in a single sentence:

    “Anticipate user needs, communicate effectively, and prioritize features to deliver a successful product.”