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Thursday, March 16, 2023
FlexAppeal: How Flexible Work Policies Keep Us Connected and Energized
The New Era of Trust: Embracing Change, AI, and Authentic Leadership
That was Quick: chatGPT is Loose. Quick get the Pitchforks.
- I've used ChatGPT more frequently than Brad Smith has.
- Lesley Stahl's writers portray her as naive and uninformed while spreading misinformation and offending a more knowledgeable audience.
- Native AI (which is NOT ChatGPT) threatens traditional media outlets and other institutions that rely heavily on public opinion(politics) and product placement(corporations).
Embracing Data-Driven Buyer Experiences in B2B E-commerce
Tuesday, March 14, 2023
First DOTC ChatGPT 4.0 Creation: "15 Minute Cities"
My Primary Prompt:
My Secondary Prompt
My Tertiaray Prompt
Monday, March 13, 2023
Wired's Ground Rules for Using Generative AI Tools in Journalism
How the Adult Film Industry Helped Shape Technology as We Know It
Sex sells, but it also inspires: How the adult film industry shaped the tech landscape we know and love.
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Ok - here we go... a walk down memory lane and talk about the good old days of VHS and dial-up internet and porn.
The adult film industry played a significant role in shaping the technology we use today. From the format wars to online streaming, porn was at the forefront of innovation.
Today, as we enter the age of AI-based personal assistants, I'm left wondering: how will porn drive the evolution and standards? How'd porn impact tech in the past, and what it could mean for the future of AI.
First, we've been here before. No matter how evolved one might think the human race is, base desires still drive progress in all things. There's a coined phrase, "erotic technology impulse".
John Tierney, a fellow at Columbia University studied the cultural impact of technology, traced the “erotic technological impulse” back at least 27,000 years—among the first clay-fired figures uncovered from that time were women with enhanced body parts.
“Sometimes the erotic has been a force driving technological innovation,” Tierney wrote in The New York Times in 1994, “virtually always, from Stone Age sculpture to computer bulletin boards, it has been one of the first uses for a new medium.”