We’re back with another edition of Machine Learnings, brought to you by the folks at Heyday.
Heyday is an AI thought partner that turns your conversations into notes, reading into quotes, and ideas into posts.
Before we dive in, another update from us.
Now you can ask a question about content you save in a topic. Come across an article and wonder how it contrasts from what you just read? We’ve brought the Heyday Q&A to help you understand the details behind the big picture.
We’ve found this extremely helpful for anyone doing research or connecting the dots on what they’ve read. Take a look at my co-founder Samiur trying it out below.
Before the year comes to a close, try out Heyday as your thought partner free for the next two weeks.
What we're reading.
1/ Google’s Gemini is live, and it beats GPT-4 in most measures. What’s that mean for OpenAI, and what should we expect from the search giant? Learn more at MIT Technology Review >
2/ Another piece of the still open OpenAI puzzle emerges – significant investments in chips that Sam Altman has ties to. Learn more at WIRED >
3/ It’s prediction season, and we’re here for it. What’s Werner Vogels see coming for tech in 2024? Learn more at All Things Distributed >
4/ We’re one year into the ChatGPT era. Nothing is the same in Silicon Valley, and yet, most everything still is the same elsewhere. For now… Learn more at The New York Times >
5/ Somewhat surprisingly, Apple hasn’t announced much in the way of AI all year, instead focusing on everything else in its ecosystem. Things may be changing with the new M3 chip and the ML community, though. Learn more at OM >
6/ OpenAI’s chatbot store was scheduled to launch this year, but has now been delayed. What’s the public’s read on this? Learn more at Quartz >
7/ Ben Thompson sums the state of progress vs. slow-down following the OpenAI turmoil. Ready Player One references abound. Where do you land? Learn more at Stratechery >
Heyday is your AI-powered thought partner. Modern professionals rely on Heyday to generate meeting notes, extract insights from research, and draft content that draws from past reading and conversations.