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Monday, May 01, 2023

How to use AI to do practical stuff: A new guide

We got educated and exploited’: Nadia Sheriff’s $35,000 loan has only reduced to $32,800 after 20 years


How Saxophonist Jimmy Giuffre Taught Me Organizational Theory The Honest Broker


The Overwhelming Case for CBDCs Willem Buiter, Project Syndicate


Return to pandemic hunger levels could signal economic fragility Reuters


There Is No A.I. Jaron Lanier, The New Yorker


How we all became AI’s brain donors Axios. Not merely strip-mining, but outright theft (or “original accumulation,” as the Bearded One calls it).


The Future of AI Relies on a High School Teacher’s Free Database Bloomberg. Kropotkin would be proud. Or not?


One Useful Thing – Ethan Mollick – People often ask me how to use AI. Here’s an overview with lots of links. “We live in an era of practical AI, but many people haven’t yet experienced it, or, if they have, they might have wondered what the big deal is. 

Thus, this guide. It is a modified version of one I put out for my students earlier in the year, but a lot has changed. It is an overview of ways to get AI to do practical things. Why people keep missing what AI can do.Large Language Models like ChatGPT are extremely powerful, but are built in a way that encourages people to use them in the wrong way. When I talk to people who tried ChatGPT but didn’t find it useful, I tend to hear a similar story. The first thing people try to do with AI is what it is worst at; using it like Google: 



tell me about my companylook up my name, and so on. These answers are terrible. Many of the models are not connected to the internet, and even the ones that are make up facts. AI is not Google. So people leave disappointed. Second, they may try something speculative, using it like Alexa, and asking a question, often about the AI itself. 

Will AI take my job? What do you like to eat? These answers are also terrible. With one exception, most of the AI systems have no personality, are not programmed to be fun like Alexa, and are not an oracle for the future. So people leave disappointed. If people still stick around, they start to ask more interesting questions, either for fun or based on half-remembered college essay prompts: 

Write an article on why ducks are the best birdWhy is Catcher in the Rye a good novel? These are better. As a result, people see blocks of text on a topic they don’t care about very much, and it is fine. Or the see text on something they are an expert in, and notice gaps. But it not that useful, or incredibly well-written. 

They usually quit around now, convinced that everyone is going to use this to cheat at school, but not much else. All of these uses are not what AI is actually good at, and how it can be helpful. They can blind you to the real power of these tools. I want to try to show you some of why AI is powerful, in ways both exciting and anxiety-producing.”

How to use AI to do practical stuff: A new guide One Useful Thing – Ethan Mollick