I am very much not looking forward to returning to the gym routine tomorrow.
I did PT for a fractured ankle, and I am hoping I can at least _get in the groove_ again.
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I am very much not looking forward to returning to the gym routine tomorrow.
I did PT for a fractured ankle, and I am hoping I can at least _get in the groove_ again.
What if search engines & AI started helping people improve their grammar?
Instead of “let’s rewrite your entire draft,” it became “let’s fix some issues here.”
Educating the end user while delivering value.
Alternatively, rude response “you mean ‘with whom’” or “yes, you can, but *may you*?”
I miss the days of open social APIs.
I would love to cross post feeds tied to projects for releases and the like, but everyone wants to charge for it.
Proposed change to AI/LLM UX:
It should not “guess” what you meant, or ignore those typos/bad grammar. It should lead you to the answer, not do the work for you.
It should be asking those questions the user should be asking, to help them learn more and need it less.
More rubber duck, less answer
“If you weren’t following AI talking heads on social media, you’d know AI was tanking.”
Saw this on LinkedIn. My question is:
What model did you use? What plan? What was your prompt?
Because I have seen incredible work by partnering with AI agents - not perfect, but effective.