Via Rex Woodbury


From DSC:
It will be interesting to see how AI and humans work together to create new kinds of things…art…architecture…other. Along these lines, here’s an item from Jeremy Caplan this morning.

Or Dan Meyer points out that some people at Stanford were asking:

“How might the unique capabilities of teachers interact with the unique capabilities of generative AI?”


And as Phillippa Hardman states:

AI represents more than a new piece of technology: it’s an infrastructural development with fundamental implications for how humans live, work and learn (DSC: and create).

I’d like to propose that a more useful analogy for the rise of AI is the introduction of electricity – a foundational technology that gave new power (literally!) and potential to a huge range of tools, applications and, of course, people.