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Forget ChatGPT--this AI makes it look like child's play

Popular Science

ChatGPT might hold a special place in your heart if it's the first AI tool you tried, but it's far from the best option now. And we aren't talking about other models like Gemini or Llama, but this other tool that combines them all in one place and eliminates the need for recurring fees: 1min.AI. It's hard to imagine how this is even possible or why everyone doesn't use 1min.AI--and that's exactly why we're sharing it. You can get a 1min.AI lifetime subscription here for 99.99, and you won't find a better price anywhere else (reg. With ChatGPT, you're used to getting only GPT models and communicating through a single text box.


Live episode: will AI make a good companion? – podcast

The Guardian

In a special episode recorded live at the British Science Festival, Madeleine Finlay and guests explore the question: will AI make a good companion? AI could give us new ways to tackle difficult problems, from young people's mental health issues to isolation in care homes. It also raises challenging questions about the increasing role of tech in our personal lives. To explore these questions, Madeleine is joined by the Guardian's science editor, Ian Sample; Tony Prescott, a professor of computational robotics at Sheffield University; and Dr Mhairi Aitken, an ethics fellow at the Alan Turing Institute and visiting senior lecturer at Queen Mary University of London.


AI makes writing easier, but stories sound alike, study says

The Japan Times

Books and movies of the future could all start to feel the same if creative industries embrace artificial intelligence to help write stories, a study published on Friday warned. The research, which drew on hundreds of volunteers and was published in Science Advances, comes amid rising fears over the impact of widely available AI tools that turn simple text prompts into relatively sophisticated music, art and writing. "Our goal was to study to what extent and how generative AI might help humans with creativity," co-author Anil Doshi of the University College London said.


Sebastian Maniscalco admits AI makes a guy who writes like 'Rocky Balboa' sound like he 'went to Yale'

FOX News

The stand-up comic told Fox News Digital he thinks live entertainment will always exist, but he has used the new technology in his personal life. "I don't know how it's going to affect stand-up comedy," Maniscalco said of AI. "I guess we haven't really seen that yet. I haven't been so on the pulse of AI going, 'Oh, wow.' I mean, I know my wife has used it to redesign our kitchen, what our kitchen might look like if we remodeled it, which is really cool to see." He said he thinks "live entertainment will always be around, but who knows … 20 years from now, I might be talking to you, and you might be going, 'Wow, you never saw AI coming.' I'd be like, 'Yeah, now I'm unemployed.'"


I love AI because it will add decades to our lives

FOX News

Fox News contributor Dr. Marc Siegel weighs in on how artificial intelligence can change the patient-doctor relationship on'America's Newsroom.' AI, ChatGPT and the like are coming for our jobs and will destroy our way of life, the doomsayers tell us. The mood is utterly different in health care, where cutting-edge physicians recognize the potential of AI to add decades to our lives and to fix the catastrophic "sick care" system, not just in the United States, but around the world. My life expectancy – and yours – is only going up, thanks to AI. Here's how and why. With the democratization of precision medicine, society will shift from a mentality that says, "I'm sick and I need treatment" to "I'm healthy and I want to stay that way." (iStock) We don't really have a health care system.


Could AI make you richer? How ChatGPT responded to simple investment questions

Daily Mail - Science & tech

It has been known to create paintings, write poems and even learn languages on its own. But could Artificial Intelligence also make you richer? Last week, it emerged JPMorgan Chase is developing a service similar to the AI-powered ChatGPT which would help customers select investments and give financial advice. Separately banks Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley have started testing the tech internally as businesses speed up their apparent AI arms race. It begs the question whether financial advisors will be needed at all in a few years as computers offer a quicker (and cheaper) alternative.


We need AI to help us face the challenges of the future Letters

The Guardian

Naomi Klein's article about the dangers of generative AI makes many valid points about the economic and social consequences of the new technology (AI machines aren't'hallucinating'. But their makers are, 8 May). But her choice of language about how to describe the mistakes that the new AI makes seems to suggest she is committed mainly to providing an ideological interpretation of the new technology. Saying that mistakes are the results of glitches in the code rather than the tech hallucinating suggests the simulation is a simple one, involving a kind of power of the false rather than a more complex one that allows the possibility of some form of fabulation. This is important because it means that the technology can't be seen simply as a control technology, like nuclear fusion or self-driving cars, but instead indicates a switch to an adaptive form of technology, ie, ones that are based on adapting what is already out there rather than trying to reinvent what exists, as in some form of innovation.


AI makes non-invasive mind-reading possible by turning thoughts into text

The Guardian

An AI-based decoder that can translate brain activity into a continuous stream of text has been developed, in a breakthrough that allows a person's thoughts to be read non-invasively for the first time. The decoder could reconstruct speech with uncanny accuracy while people listened to a story – or even silently imagined one – using only fMRI scan data. Previous language decoding systems have required surgical implants, and the latest advance raises the prospect of new ways to restore speech in patients struggling to communicate due to a stroke or motor neurone disease. Dr Alexander Huth, a neuroscientist who led the work at the University of Texas at Austin, said: "We were kind of shocked that it works as well as it does. I've been working on this for 15 years … so it was shocking and exciting when it finally did work."


Will AI make us more secure? - TechNative

#artificialintelligence

ChatGPT, the dialogue-based AI chatbot capable of understanding natural human language, has become another icon in the disruptor ecosystem. Gaining over 1 million registered users in just 5 days, it has become the fastest growing tech platform ever. ChatGPT generates impressively detailed human-like written text and thoughtful prose, following a text input prompt. In addition, ChatGPT can write and hack code which is a potential major headache from an infosec point of view and has set the Web3 community on fire. Following the hype around ChatGPT, the race is now on between OpenAI's Chat GPT and Google's LaMDA to be the market leading NLP search tool for users and corporations moving forward.


Kagan: AI makes us smarter and dumbs us down at the same time

#artificialintelligence

We get so excited about all the advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) from companies and developments like Chatbot and generative AI. This is a new and exciting opportunity for investors, workers, governments and individuals. That being said, there are two sides to every coin. While this may indeed help mankind reach new levels, the other side of the coin means it also dulls us down. That, along with other dangers mean we need to stay on top of AI and make sure it doesn't get away from us because we can lose control.