Making sense of Moltbook, social media site for AI
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With the rise of gen AI tools, offices have had to contend with a new scourge: “workslop” or low-effort, AI-generated work that looks plausibly polished, but ends up wasting time and effort as it offloads cognitive work onto the recipient.
Most organizations struggle to innovate because they don’t solve the gap between a compelling strategy and consistent execution.
Heavy AI use can inflate confidence, weaken judgment, and leave workers struggling when tools are removed, innovation theorist John Nosta said.
What if you could build your own AI-powered assistant, one that handles repetitive tasks, streamlines communication, and even makes intelligent decisions, without writing a single line of code? It might sound like a futuristic dream, but with n8n, an open ...
There’s a certain angst that many humans feel, in envisioning an artificial intelligence system plugging along, humming with algorithmic fire, and creating other digital systems, essentially setting up a recursive workflow that may never end, or that, in ...
The researchers took a “safety-first” approach. They deliberately excluded all viruses that infect humans or animals from the AI’s training data. The AI only knows how to build “bacteriophages” — viruses that are harmless to humans but lethal to bacteria.
What if designing a stunning website didn’t require hours of tweaking, coding, and second-guessing? Imagine a tool that could transform your rough ideas into polished, professional designs in a fraction of the time. Enter Figma Make, the AI-powered ...
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How Studocu AI helps you create exam notes with your classmates
Why collaborative exam notes matter?Exam season often feels like organized chaos. Between lecture slides, textbooks, group chat screenshots, and countless PDFs scattered across devices, students spend more time pulling resources together than actually studying them.
Your YouTube Shorts feed might soon be filled with a lot more AI-generated content from your favorite creators — including AI-generated versions of the creators themselves. In his annual letter released today, YouTube CEO Neal Mohan says that sometime this year, creators will be able to make Shorts using their “own likeness.”