What's the coolest thing you've seen AI make?
A run through the magical, functional, and oh-so-sweet recent artifacts.
We’re back with another edition of Machine Learnings, brought to you by the folks at Heyday.
Heyday is an AI-powered memory assistant that resurfaces content you forgot about while you browse the web.
Next week will be our final Machine Learnings of 2022, and we’ll share our own favorites of the year.
Let us know what you’d like to see more of in 2023 – new products, technical synopses, Heyday use cases? DMs are open.
-@samdebrule
Awesome, not awesome.
#Awesome
Remix of the year?
#Not Awesome
Another reminder of how far AI has to go.
What we're reading.
1/ Are we witnessing a step change in technology? Where does that leave the humans in the loop? Learn more at Benedict Evans’ personal site >
2/ A 10-minute run-through of experiments you can do today with ChatGPT that may convert you into believing this will change things. Learn more at Substack >
3/ Our friends at Every are building important AI tooling, and this paints a future of what is possible for the digital librarian in every company. Well worth the read. Learn more at Every >
4/ More functional tooling. This one from Perplexity AI for dealing with SQL. That sound you faintly hear is PMs around the world rejoicing. Learn more at Twitter >
5/ The debate on ‘What jobs will AI replace?’ has roared for years, and we’re at a new inflection point. The format here reflects the conversation that happened. Well done. Learn more at a16z >
6/ This from a few weeks back got lost in the mayhem of ChatGPT, but can we actually create wormholes in spacetime now? I’m just going to let you read…Learn more at the Google AI Blog >
7/ My personal favorite of the week – Riffusion. A new form of music visualizers. Learn more at TechCrunch >
Research for this edition of Machine Learnings was enhanced by Heyday, the AI-powered memory assistant.