I can’t think of a worse marketing picture for a GPS than the one above, “Chester, this way”.I’m not really older than the internet but when I was a kid only the dad blasted gubbermint and the evil godless huge multinational corporations had it.
In the early ninties we heard about the “information superhighway” and really couldn’t imagine what the World Wide Web was.
Y2K threatened our national existence until —-January 1, 2000 came and went without our cars not starting or much of anything happening bad.
My experiences with artificial intelligence so far have all been very pleasant.
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I’ve used the boiling alcohol retort a number of times and it has never involved dropping a pipe in boiling alcohol. The retort is attached to the stem using a rubber tube. The chamber is filled with cotton, and you use a rocking motion to move the boiling alcohol back and forth between the chamber and the retort. Works great for removing tars and oils from the briar, but total immersion? No way.I ran across an alcohol retort cleaning of a pipe.
it involved a stock pot filled with ever clear, a pipe dropped in. and the whole kaboodle brought to a roiling boil.
it involved a stock pot filled with ever clear, a pipe dropped in. and the whole kaboodle brought to a roiling boil.
Don't forget tobacco blending!I can't wait for all the zoomers who graduated by copy/pasting AI to start serving as judges and doctors and airline pilots.
Legislation becomes, at once, both a limit and a source. Much of the information we pour into the internet does not arise from free choice, but from the obligation or coercion imposed by governments in their relentless drive to control the population. The use of digital money, the mandatory registration of photographs and biometric data for every citizen, the proliferation of cameras and tracking systems—all of this decisively feeds the databases that sustain artificial intelligence algorithms.I am a data scientist by trade and education and specialize in AI and Machine Learning and let me tell you, it will be perfected some day and when it does, it will be terrifying and it is coming far sooner than anyone imagines. The only thing currently limiting it is legislation
Let's keep the PMSS 2025 Participants out of this, shall we?Yes, I am aware that some of you would consider that an improvement
It's not impossible for it to be a useful tool but more as a search engine and needs quite lengthy training and constant supervision, so it's practically useless for people who don't already know at least 80% of the information they are looking for.My favourite use of AI is when folks selling estate pipes use Chat GPT to craft a product description. I’ve seen dozens of variants of "This briar smoking pipe comes in a sleek design"...
Still, I much prefer that to when they actually try to use it to research the brand and value. "Your pipe likely dates to XX-YY and is a valuable collectors item." Yeah, right.
Oh sure, with AI you absolutely get out what you put in.It's not impossible for it to be a useful tool but more as a search engine and needs quite lengthy training and constant supervision, so it's practically useless for people who don't already know at least 80% of the information they are looking for.
I couldn't have said it better. AI is an incredible tool for almost anything, but it's been over hyped and people are expecting it to do impossible that NGS. As soon as you spend a bit of time with the tool, get familiarized and lower your expectations, then and only then it turns into a great and useful tool.Oh sure, with AI you absolutely get out what you put in.
Actual human output from someone knowledgeable is always going to be at least a little better if for no other reason than because of the human element. For people who are experts and can already produce any one specific thing, AI can be useful as a way to seed up the process, or shorten the boring bits, etc. because they know what a good result looks like and can guide the AI to reach that point.
But that’s usually turning an 8 hour process down to say 2 hours, not a 5-minnute job. AI isn’t really a replacement for anything if you have no clue about a topic and one-shot your way to some output. Sadly that’s practically 80% of the visible use of AI on the web today.
One thing that often happens even to reasonably experienced people is that they sort of lose focus. People are rigorous with detailed prompts and monitoring what the AI is doing for the first few days or weeks after a new model is out. Later they relax and get complacent, start to expect that the AI should somehow "understand" them better because of their previous conversation history. They stop investing the time in properly prompting the AI and monitoring it, course correcting etc. And then surprise, they get worse results.I couldn't have said it better. AI is an incredible tool for almost anything, but it's been over hyped and people are expecting it to do impossible that NGS. As soon as you spend a bit of time with the tool, get familiarized and lower your expectations, then and only then it turns into a great and useful tool.
