[Lex Computer & Tech Group/LCTG] 13 ways people in the Boston area are using artificial intelligence right now
Harry Forsdick
harry at forsdick.com
Wed Jul 12 06:43:09 PDT 2023
An alternative approach, with no fewer copyright infringements, is to send
the article as a pdf attachment.
— Harry
On Wed, Jul 12, 2023 at 9:35 AM Robert Primak <bobprimak at yahoo.com> wrote:
> The entire, wide-screen article is still attached.
>
> The inclusion of the previous message as "original message" leaves all
> subsequent messages in the thread or "conversation" stuck in the
> wide-screen overflow mode. And allowing such a lengthy quoted message to
> remain in each reply makes each new message bigger and bigger to scroll
> through.
>
> And Harry, it isn't just you by any stretch, so to speak. [image: Emoji]
>
> I appreciate that not everyone has a subscription to every place where we
> find interesting articles. And maybe I'm the only one complaining.
>
> -- Bob Primak
>
>
> On Wednesday, July 12, 2023 at 09:26:37 AM EDT, <jjrudy1 at comcast.net>
> wrote:
>
>
> There is a short story by Stephen King about the library Police. It is
> MUST reading.
>
> When a man forgets to return some books he borrowed from the library while
> writing a speech, and later accidentally destroys them, the phantom
> librarian who lent him the books sends the library policemen to terrorize
> him. It is in his book Four Past Midnight.
>
> John
>
>
>
> *From:* LCTG <lctg-bounces+jjrudy1=comcast.net at lists.toku.us> *On Behalf
> Of *Steve Isenberg
> *Sent:* Wednesday, July 12, 2023 8:47 AM
> *To:* harry at forsdick.com
> *Cc:* Lex Computer Group <lctg at lists.toku.us>
> *Subject:* Re: [Lex Computer & Tech Group/LCTG] 13 ways people in the
> Boston area are using artificial intelligence right now
>
>
>
> Do the copyright police work with the library police?
>
>
>
>
>
> On Wed, Jul 12, 2023 at 8:33 AM Harry Forsdick <forsdick at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Bob,
>
>
>
> You are right. My bad. I did this because I know that not everyone has a
> subscription to the Globe. I did have some qualms about posting the
> article because I violated the copyright. And again I am sorry for that.
>
>
>
> I trust when the copyright police come to put me in jail for this, someone
> will mention that I need to have some Wednesdays off to run the LCTG hybrid
> meeting system… (but not today since I’m on vacation :-)
>
>
>
> — Harry
>
>
>
> On Tue, Jul 11, 2023 at 11:34 PM Robert Primak <bobprimak at yahoo.com>
> wrote:
>
> To Everyone:
>
>
>
> Please do not send entire articles to this mailing list. They make for
> huge downloads for those of us who use desktop email clients.
>
>
>
> Also, articles tend to be sent here in extra-wide formats which do not
> display well in web mail interfaces.
>
>
>
> And when included in subsequent replies as quoted previous content, the
> message threads become absolutely unreadable and unmanageable with clients
> or web interfaces.
>
>
>
> It is much more considerate to only post reference URLs, and not to expect
> everyone who receives the messages to want to slog through a giant article
> in non-text format just to get through to the actual email message.
>
>
>
> If such extra-wide articles show up, the message itself is rendered
> unreadable, as it extends way beyond the viewing pane in web mail
> interfaces.
>
>
>
> We need a policy (if one is not already in place) to prevent this practice
> in the future.
>
>
>
> Not everyone wants to read the entire article. We should have a choice,
> short of unsubscribing from this email list altogether.
>
>
>
> The reference URL is sufficient.
>
>
>
> -- Bob Primak
>
>
>
>
>
> On Tuesday, July 11, 2023 at 07:38:09 AM EDT, Harry Forsdick <
> forsdick at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> Folks,
>
> The more I look into ML/AI the more I think about my friends at MIT in the
> early days of AI. I refer to "AI" this way (ML/AI) in honor of the
> predecessors of the current people doing ML/AI because my contemporaries
> were trying so hard to model the processes of how humans think. These are
> the so-called pioneers of AI. These are people at MIT like Marvin Minsky,
> John McCarthy, Terry Winograd, and Carl Hewitt.
>
> The MIT pioneers are very different from today's researchers. The ML/AI
> researchers and developers have approached the problem extremely
> differently, and have been more successful in showing positive results.
> But ML/AI don't address the problem with the intention of representing
> intelligence and the processes of creativity as the pioneers who struggled
> in the early days did, trying to mimic human intelligence.
>
> The question is, as with the researchers into airplanes who approached the
> problem initially by modeling birds by strapping large wings to people
> rather than the Wright Bros approach which skipped that part and went to
> something that worked, I suspect some day ML/AI will prevail and my friends
> on the upper floors of 545 Tech Square will be looked at like the bird wing
> guys of AI.
>
> -- Harry
>
>
> 13 ways people in the Boston area are using artificial intelligence right
> nowEarly adopters are finding creative ways to make the most out of the
> buzzy technology
>
> *By Dana Gerber
> <https://www.bostonglobe.com/about/staff-list/staff/dana-gerber/?p1=Article_Byline>*
> Globe Staff,Updated July 10, 2023, 5:38 a.m.
>
> *11*
> <https://www.bostonglobe.com/2023/07/10/business/locals-using-ai/?s_campaign=breakingnews:newsletter#bgmp-comments>
>
> [image: From an AI-generated beer recipe to meal-planning for Marathon
> training, local early adopters are finding creative ways to make the most
> out of the buzzy technology.]From an AI-generated beer recipe to
> meal-planning for Marathon training, local early adopters are finding
> creative ways to make the most out of the buzzy technology.ADOBE, AP,
> MEGAN LAM/GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
>
> The chatbots have arrived, and we are already keeping them busy.
>
> There’s no end to the ways that people are using artificial intelligence
> systems like ChatGPT, Google’s Bard, and Bing’s new search engine in
> everyday life. Yes, this can include more outlandish uses — like suggesting messages
> to send matches on dating apps
> <https://mashable.com/article/chatgpt-tinder-tiktok> — but it can also
> mean outsourcing tedious tasks that require time but little brainpower.
> Following up on that pesky e-mail chain? Meal-planning for a family of
> four? Organizing meeting notes? Check, check, check.
>
> *RELATED: **A technophobe’s guide to AI chatbots*
> <https://bostonglobe.com/2023/07/10/business/chatbot-how-to-guide/?p1=Article_Inline_Related_Link>
>
> There are risks to using artificial intelligence, of course: In one
> high-profile case, two New York lawyers found themselves in hot water
> <https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/22/nyregion/lawyers-chatgpt-schwartz-loduca.html> after
> filing a legal brief filled with information that ChatGPT had invented out
> of whole cloth — an egregious example of the potential for these systems
> to “hallucinate,”
> <https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/01/business/ai-chatbots-hallucination.html> or
> make up facts. Experts are concerned that AI could even pose a “risk for
> extinction,”
> <https://www.bostonglobe.com/2023/05/31/business/this-is-civilization-threatening-heres-why-ai-poses-an-existential-risk/?s_campaign=trendlines:newsletter&p1=Article_Inline_Text_Link> and
> tech leaders have called for regulations and guardrails
> <https://www.bostonglobe.com/2023/03/29/business/mit-scientists-tech-leaders-call-pause-artificial-intelligence-research/?p1=Article_Inline_Text_Link>
> .
>
> But for tasks with relatively low stakes — picking out a new car, writing
> real estate listings, or crafting a class syllabus — users are finding
> chatbots to be diligent assistants. The Globe talked with more than a dozen
> Massachusetts residents about how they’re using this technology in their
> day-to-day lives. Here’s what we found. (If you want to try any of these
> out for yourself but need some help getting started, check out our AI
> guide
> <https://bostonglobe.com/2023/07/10/business/chatbot-how-to-guide/?p1=Article_Inline_Text_Link>
> .)
>
> [image: Night Shift Brewery in Everett enlisted ChatGPT's help to concoct
> a new IPA recipe, which the AI gave the name AI-P-A.]Night Shift Brewery
> in Everett enlisted ChatGPT's help to concoct a new IPA recipe, which the
> AI gave the name "AI-P-A."COURTESY OF NIGHT SHIFT BREWING
> Beer brewing
>
> AI might not be able to malt the barley or mill the grain — at least not
> yet — but Night Shift Brewery in Everett used ChatGPT to handle other parts
> of the beer-making process. Enlisted by cofounder Michael Oxton to create
> the “perfect beer,” ChatGPT concocted a recipe for a 7.5 percent hazy IPA
> with notes of mango, orange, and pine. Oxton then sent the recipe to Night
> Shift’s head brewer. “He was just like, ‘Damn, that’s a good recipe,’” said
> Oxton.
>
> Night Shift’s team didn’t stop there: They asked ChatGPT to come up with a
> name for the brew (it offered up “AI-P-A”). They also used Midjourney, an
> AI service that generates images from text descriptions, to design the
> beer’s label — a graffiti-like illustration of a robot handling a pint.
> Night Shift released a limited supply of the beer in February
> <https://www.instagram.com/p/Co8EAPbPM8-/>, and plans to revive it at
> some point down the line.
>
> In the meantime, they’re launching a new ad campaign:
> Midjourney-generated images depicting owls taking over Boston landmarks
> have been plastered on billboards along Interstate 93, Route 1, and Route
> 16, to ring in the release of a new “Owls in Boston” IPA.
>
> *RELATED: **We asked AI to plan the perfect Boston day. Here’s where it
> took us.*
> <https://www.bostonglobe.com/2023/05/26/business/we-asked-ai-plan-perfect-boston-day-heres-where-it-took-us/?p1=Article_Inline_Related_Link>
> Someone to talk to
>
> When Chris Zombik was trying to kill some time, he typed a request into
> ChatGPT: *I am dying of boredom and need someone to talk to.*
>
> “And it came up with a bunch of ideas of topics we could discuss,” said
> Zombik, an author who lives in Somerville. Soon, they were talking about a
> book he had recently read — “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas” by Hunter S.
> Thompson — and it became “quite a philosophical conversation,” he said,
> about generational dismay.
>
> “The bot is a very careful listener, so to speak, and really engaged with
> what I was saying,” he said. “When your other friends aren’t responding to
> you and you’re looking for a distraction in the middle of the day, that’s
> pretty powerful.”
>
> Zombik returned to this conversation multiple times, and within weeks he
> had crashed the “context window,”
> <https://techcrunch.com/2023/03/14/openai-is-testing-a-version-of-gpt-4-that-can-remember-long-conversations/> or
> the extent to which the chatbot is designed to “remember” previous
> interactions. “That was actually kind of despairing when that happened,
> because it was like my friend had kind of died,” he said.
> Marathon meal-planning
>
> As she was gearing up to run the Boston Marathon for the first time,
> Middleton resident Audrey Ellis enlisted a running coach — but it was
> ChatGPT that she tasked with building some pre-race meal plans. She input
> her allergies and her calorie intake goal, specifying that she is mostly
> vegetarian, and ChatGPT spit out recipes for quinoa salad, veggie burgers,
> and yogurt bowls. She then asked it to generate a grocery list.
>
> Though she didn’t end up using all the robot-suggested recipes — and she
> had to prod it to exclude almond butter even after saying she was allergic
> — she did complete the Marathon, with a finishing time of 4:47:43.
>
> [image: Union Realty Group in Newton has begun using an AI chatbot to
> generate real estate listings for Facebook.]Union Realty Group in Newton
> has begun using an AI chatbot to generate real estate listings for Facebook.COURTESY
> OF UNION REALTY GROUP
> Real estate listings
>
> Arman Khachatryan, a data analyst, saw the labor involved in producing
> real estate listings from his friend, Shant Davidian, who is a co-owner and
> agent at Union Realty Group in Newton. So Khachatryan used ChatGPT’s API
> <https://techcrunch.com/2023/03/01/openai-launches-an-api-for-chatgpt-plus-dedicated-capacity-for-enterprise-customers/> —
> which allows businesses to customize the model for specific purposes — to
> create a chatbot to scan Union’s database, generate short descriptions for
> properties, and post listings to Facebook, all in one fell swoop.
>
> Davidian said that Union can now post over 100 Facebook listings in about
> an hour, leading to anywhere from 10 to 50-plus inquiries a day.
> Khachatryan is working on fleshing out the tool to interact with interested
> renters directly, show them other properties that may be a good fit, and
> schedule showings.
>
> “All agents are now spending more time going and showing the apartments to
> their clients than just sitting in front of a computer,” said Khachatryan.
>
> *RELATED: **How a couple of Olin College students helped spark the AI
> chatbot revolution*
> <https://www.bostonglobe.com/2023/06/10/business/how-couple-olin-college-students-helped-spark-ai-chatbot-revolution/?p1=Article_Inline_Related_Link>
> Car shopping
>
> Scott Johnson, an Allston/Brighton resident, turned to Bing’s AI-powered
> search engine to help him decide on a car to buy for a drive to
> Bakersville, California. He asked Bing — which, unlike ChatGPT, can surf
> the web
> <https://blogs.microsoft.com/blog/2023/02/07/reinventing-search-with-a-new-ai-powered-microsoft-bing-and-edge-your-copilot-for-the-web/> in
> real time for updates — to provide information on vehicle mileage, the
> amount of space in the back of various cars, and the differences between
> model years. Using Bing’s insights, he decided on a Subaru, and now has
> plans to purchase a 2023 Forester.
>
> He noticed some discrepancies between the mileage figures listed on Bing
> and on Subaru’s website, but Bing was a good place to start research,
> Johnson said. “Instead of having, like, 10 [search] windows open, I have
> this device that can do all that for me,” he said.
> Poetry writing
>
> When a friend was recovering from a trip to the hospital, Lexington
> resident Bill Rosenfeld charged ChatGPT with composing a poem as a get-well
> note. He typed in some of his friend’s personality traits, the reason he
> was in the hospital, and the get-better-soon sentiment. It spat out a
> seven-stanza poem, which Rosenfeld made some small edits to before sending
> it off to his friend, “who absolutely loved it,” he said.
>
> He had never attempted being a rhymester before, but Rosenfeld has now
> used ChatGPT to write about 10 more poems for occasions like retirements
> and birthdays.
>
> “My first thought was, Hallmark’s in big trouble,” he said. “It’s
> personalized, and it looks like much more work than it is, even if you
> completely attribute it to ChatGPT.”
>
> *RELATED: **Tech Lab: ‘This is civilization-threatening’: Here’s why AI
> poses an existential risk*
> <https://www.bostonglobe.com/2023/05/31/business/this-is-civilization-threatening-heres-why-ai-poses-an-existential-risk/?p1=Article_Inline_Related_Link>
> Job hunting
>
> After Caitlin Gillooly, a Brighton resident, was laid off from her job as
> a manager of merchandising compliance at Wayfair, she turned to ChatGPT to
> help craft cover letters for job applications. She plugged in details about
> her background and the sort of strategy consultancy and e-commerce
> operations jobs she was interested in, and ChatGPT spit out drafts for her
> to spice up — a cure for her self-described “blank page syndrome.”
>
> “I think a personal touch in a job search is still super critical,” she
> said. AI, she added, “isn’t going to eliminate the importance of things
> like networking, personal connections, and letting a little of your own
> personality shine through.”
>
> Gillooly got a few interviews from these AI-assisted applications, but she
> is now forgoing the job search to launch an AI consultancy
> <https://www.looly.co/>to help others increase their productivity.
>
> [image: ChatGPT helped Allston resident Taryn L’Hussier find the Disney
> World parks that would best accommodate her Celiac disease. Pictured here
> are the gluten free chicken tenders and fries that she ate in Animal
> Kingdom.]ChatGPT helped Allston resident Taryn L’Hussier find the Disney
> World parks that would best accommodate her Celiac disease. Pictured here
> are the gluten free chicken tenders and fries that she ate in Animal
> Kingdom.COURTESY OF TARYN L'HUSSIER
> Meal-planning at Disney
>
> As she was preparing for a trip to Disney World in March, Allston resident
> Taryn L’Hussier wanted to find the parks that would best accommodate her
> celiac disease. ChatGPT told her where in each park she could find
> gluten-free grub, and she asked it to devise a walking path to hit all of
> the eateries.
>
> She ended up chowing down on everything from churros at Animal Kingdom to
> onion rings at Disney Springs to a macaron ice cream sandwich at Epcot. “I
> ate so good in Disney World,” she said.
> Accent training
>
> Jennifer Abramson runs The Accent Helper, a small business that works with
> people who want to adopt an American intonation. Recently, the Somerville
> resident has asked ChatGPT to write practice material tailored to each
> client’s interests and needs.
>
> For one soccer-obsessed client from South America, for instance, this
> meant supplying sentences about Lionel Messi chock-full of words with the
> “-TH” sound, which he was learning to pronounce. The ChatGPT-generated
> lines included phrases like “the epitome of breathtaking scale,”
> “thunderous brilliance,” and “athleticism in sync.”
>
> “Could I write that? Of course,” she said. “But will it take me an hour to
> do what ChatGPT did in literally 20 seconds? Yes.”
>
> *RELATED: **Innovation Beat: Apple isn’t labeling its AI products ‘AI.’
> Here’s why that’s important.*
> <https://www.bostonglobe.com/2023/06/06/business/apple-isnt-labeling-its-ai-products-ai-heres-why-thats-important/?p1=Article_Inline_Related_Link>
> Distilling complex concepts
>
> Chris Feifer, an executive vice president of medical marketing agency
> FreshBlood Group, is often tasked with simplifying complex concepts from
> biotech and pharmaceutical clients for an audience of laypeople.
>
> “Sometimes it’s a lot of work for a copywriter or for a medical director
> to distill that information and to find the key messages,” said Feifer, who
> is based in Sharon. So FreshBlood has started using ChatGPT to take a first
> pass. One client, Feifer said, asked FreshBlood to prepare a presentation
> on validating a specific kind of clinical trial study, and ChatGPT broke
> down the process into simple steps.
>
> It’s not a silver bullet, though. “There are cases where something doesn’t
> seem quite right,” said Feifer, adding that any and all AI-generated
> information is carefully validated by a medical director and edited. “It’s
> obviously invaluable as a tool, but it’s not a crutch. You can’t rely on it
> completely.”
>
> [image: Beth Bailey, who teaches pottery classes, uses ChatGPT and Bard to
> devise class curriculums and syllabi.]Beth Bailey, who teaches pottery
> classes, uses ChatGPT and Bard to devise class curriculums and syllabi.ALISON
> THOMPSON PHOTOGRAPHY
> Crafting a syllabus
>
> Beth Bailey runs pottery classes out of her home studio in Whitman
> <https://bethbaileypottery.com/>, and also teaches at various art
> institutions, including Clay Lounge in the South End and Local Pottery in
> Norwell. To pitch to outside studios, she has to write a concise curriculum
> outlining what her class will cover, as well as a student syllabus.
>
> She used to gin these up from scratch, but now, she plugs in information
> about the class to Bard or ChatGPT, which condenses and formats it to her
> specifications. It also simplifies some of the more advanced language —
> cutting words like “underglaze” and “sgraffito” — “so that it’s not
> insider’s baseball,” said Bailey.
>
> “I’ve even said things like, ‘In this particular sentence, make it less
> cringey,’ — and it does,” said Bailey. “It’s a game changer for the little
> business I’m trying to build for myself here as an artist and an educator.”
>
> *RELATED: **Tech Lab: Is AI a job killer? IBM may think so, but it’s all
> in how you use it.*
> <https://www.bostonglobe.com/2023/05/04/business/is-ai-job-killer-ibm-may-think-so-its-all-how-you-use-it/?p1=Article_Inline_Related_Link>
> Study scheduling
>
> Priya Sharma, who works as a risk consultant for the financial technology
> firm Empyrean Solutions in Woburn, has aspirations to become a data
> scientist. To that end, ChatGPT built her a five-month study schedule
> outlining broad topics she should learn, such as data structures, coding
> languages, and machine learning algorithms.
>
> She didn’t end up following the schedule to a tee, because she wanted to
> dive deeper into some of the individual topics, like data structures. But
> the bot also pointed her to the online course platform Udemy, which offers
> a detailed class on the subject.
>
> “Anytime I have a question or something that I think might be difficult to
> find on a search engine, ChatGPT is my first source of information,” said
> Sharma.
>
> *RELATED: **Innovation Economy: Boston needs to get smarter about AI*
> <https://www.bostonglobe.com/2023/04/11/business/boston-needs-get-smarter-about-artificial-intelligence/?p1=Article_Inline_Related_Link>
> Getting class help
>
> Manind Gera, who recently earned a master’s degree in computer science
> from Boston University, used AI to help him understand concepts in a
> graduate-level game theory class. One economic model, the Cournot duopoly,
> was giving him particular trouble, so he asked ChatGPT to explain it to him
> “like I’m five,” he said.
>
> “That really helps sometimes,” he said. “Usually I would just go on office
> hours or spend hours on Google trying to find the right resource for it.”
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Harry Forsdick <http://www.forsdick.com/resume/>
> Lexington Photo Scanning <http://lexingtonphotoscan.com/>
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Harry Forsdick <http://www.forsdick.com/resume/>
Lexington Photo Scanning <http://lexingtonphotoscan.com/>
Town Meeting Member Precinct 7 <http://lexingtontmma.org/>
harry at forsdick.com 46 Burlington St., Lexington, MA 02420
<https://goo.gl/xZXT2F>
(781) 799-6002 (mobile) <callto:17817996002>
www.forsdick.com
click <http://forsdick.weebly.com/home/my-websites> to see my other websites
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