AI isn’t going away and will be part of our future. To date AI has been like the Wild West — little rules, go find your fortune. Civilization tamed the west with the establishment of norms and rule of law. The same can be said of AI. We need to make AI assessable by humans. If humans aren’t included in process, what kind of future are we building. With only 27% adoption, let’s harness it and solve real human problems for humans. Change the narrative and maybe adoption will follow.
Even in the most basic way, but I always want to build something along the concept that I don't understand. If you pick it apart the whole magic thing goes away!
I've been watching my own kids try to get ChatGPT to do their homework instead of learning with it, and it's exactly your microwave analogy, they want the output without understanding what's happening.
What gets me excited is that moment you described when people start naming the unease. That's when they stop treating AI like a magic slot machine and start asking better questions. The difference between "make this work" and "help me think through this" changes everything.
Such a brilliant analogy, using AI really is like learning to drive; understanding the rules makes all the difference.
AI isn’t going away and will be part of our future. To date AI has been like the Wild West — little rules, go find your fortune. Civilization tamed the west with the establishment of norms and rule of law. The same can be said of AI. We need to make AI assessable by humans. If humans aren’t included in process, what kind of future are we building. With only 27% adoption, let’s harness it and solve real human problems for humans. Change the narrative and maybe adoption will follow.
Even in the most basic way, but I always want to build something along the concept that I don't understand. If you pick it apart the whole magic thing goes away!
I've been watching my own kids try to get ChatGPT to do their homework instead of learning with it, and it's exactly your microwave analogy, they want the output without understanding what's happening.
What gets me excited is that moment you described when people start naming the unease. That's when they stop treating AI like a magic slot machine and start asking better questions. The difference between "make this work" and "help me think through this" changes everything.
What makes me pause is this question: “who is really controlling the AI I am sharing so much with and rely more and more to help me Everyday”
This is the type of thoughts and conversations we should keep challenging people to have