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  • 🔗 AI is like going from muskets to missiles, everywhere all at once

    By February we’d plugged it into our systems and within weeks, supervised by experienced team members, we let it reply to a handful of customer emails. Emails written by AI delivered 80 per cent customer satisfaction — comfortably better than the 65 per cent achieved by skilled, trained people.
    Very cool and humbling to see something very public and from the top talking about what we've been working on at work.
    chat_gpt_article.png 1.62 MB
  • 🔗 Steve Roberts: Computing Across America

    Steve Roberts may well have been the original digital nomad. Learn more about him and his fascinating computerized bicycles here...
    I have a sudden urge to build a winnebiko. So cool.

    Solar powered winnebiko camping ⛺️


     
  • 🔗 The Electric Shuffle

    I can make some of my own electricity at home, but I can’t make my own gas. My point here is there are ways ordinary people can switch to healthier non gas cooking at a reasonable price point without engaging in institutional drama or politics.
    As much as I hate my gas-stove for all of the reasons listed in the article and want to replace it – $3,000 or so (including upgrading electric in the kitchen) is a bit much right now. However, they make a good point about using smaller appliances to fill the gap. One could even use portal batteries / solar arrays to charge and cook off of them entirely off grid. Clever.

    I reckon I could replace the majority of my gas range usage with a little portable 1 or 2 burner IH cooktop. When combined with my slow-cooker I bet we wouldn't even need to use the gas range at all...a $75 - $150 fix instead of a $3,000 fix to reduce carbon emissions and improve indoor air quality. Seems reasonable to me. They even make some with legs so they could fit in place of / over your gas range.
  • 🔗 PaperCamp

    James Wheare now gives a quick demo. He’s making a daily physical lifestream. Overnight, it pulls in blog entries, Flickr pictures and twitter messages from his friends and in the morning, he prints out a foldable A4 page. He can fold this down into a little booklet to take with him when he leaves the house.
    I don’t commute most days so printing out a “lifestream” doesn’t quite make sense for me, but I love the idea of using paper more. I love paper and pens and notebooks…I can just never seem to get in the habit of using them.

    But being able to mashup feeds and photos together via open APIs and formats is one thing that makes the internet great. I should look into doing more of that, instead of outsourcing it to Mastodon and my RSS reader…
  • 🔗 A community isn’t a garden, it’s a bar.

    But it’s almost 2023 now. The world is different, the online world is very different, and I’m pushing 50. So I think it’s time we all start talking about online gathering places with a more apt metaphor: bars.
    Very apt description of online community. You can't have a good bar without a good bartender (community manager). The big social sites always try to outsource the bar tending to AI or outsourced moderators to save money, but it doesn't work.
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