
It seems clear we will have to live with artificial intelligence, like it or not. As Scottish data scientist and senior researcher at the University of Oxford Hannah Ritchie posted on Monday, “AI could really change things. It has the potential to not only improve the accuracy of (weather) forecasts but also to run them more quickly and efficiently. That then makes them better and cheaper.” Okay… I’m listening.
At the pre-2025 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, weather predicting got very good. I could look at the weather radar on my computer, identify where the storms were going and with what intensity, and then figure out how much time I had to mow before rain started. Because of great weather forecasting, I was almost never wrong. How much better can it get? With the administration’s cuts to NOAA, the machines may be necessary to continue progress, and according to Ritchie, it looks like they have the potential.
For me, the AI game changer has been organizing basic life tasks. On Oct. 10, I wrote:
I’m four days in using AI to help plan a more productive day. With its “Balanced Day Plan,” I immediately eliminated a background concern that there is too much to do and not enough time in which to do it. I am fond of the saying an air traffic controller can only land one airplane at a time. So it is with tasks I have before me. AI finds a way to get it all into a day. If it can’t, it tells me. This serves as a stress reliever, helping me focus on the task at hand, and I do a better job with it. For example, I need to drink more water to stay hydrated. …This pursuit is just getting started and my best hope for AI lies herein.
From there, my life has taken wing. It is curious what a tonic eliminating worries can be. While AI has been great at getting my organizational juices flowing, I have already come to a high water mark with the machine, and from here I can proceed on my own.
I took the “Balanced Daily Plan” and translated it into language that fits in my world. I updated my existing, pre-AI Daily Plan to include the most salient points identified by AI. I was concerned about adequate hydration, so I highlighted in blue some words where my new hydration schedule would occur. I generalized the pomodoro work block process, with three blocks in the morning and two in the afternoon. I was careful to create plenty of space to do necessary tasks and recover once they were done. I decided to move to the kitchen about 3 p.m. and work there until dinnertime. AI helped me to recognize how a day could be structured, something I was not doing with any effectiveness on my own. Now that I re-wrote my regular schedule, I am free to go on my own, and will.
During the pandemic, stuff had a way of accumulating without being adequately addressed. This includes all of the areas in which I work at home. Think of the basics: food, shelter, and clothing. Each of them was a disorganized space where I had no idea what was possible. I got bogged down by stuff accumulated in each area. To get started, I queried AI about the vast quantity of t-shirts scattered throughout the house. The machine result helped organize the collection enough to know what I could be wearing for different purposes, and store the ones not in immediate use in labeled boxes. That had been hanging over me, yet by using AI to do the project I relieved stress and worry about it.
From here it became easier. I cleaned out the refrigerator and found a vast quantity of pickled items. Unaware, I overestimated how many pickles I could eat in a year. The pickled vegetable situation got away from me. I did not use AI for this sorting. The t-shirt project had primed the pump for any type of organizational project. Now I look for those projects to fill some of the space outside pomodoro blocks. This will apply to my workshop, writing space, the kitchen, garden, and all of the defined spaces in our home. This is what I mean when I say my life has taken wing.
AI is not going away. I expect to use it as a tool when I find a project puzzling, poorly designed, or inadequately resourced. No one knows the future of AI despite all the public rhetoric. It is far from easy to use and keeps crashing on what I believe are easy tasks. For the time being, it is one more tool in my workshop to help make life better. That and a few pickles to snack on and I can make it a day.
One reply on “Living with AI”
My problem is what it takes to power up these data centers and the amount of water that will be wasted cooling these operations. Not unlike many other operations that take advantage of clean ground water, such as distilleries etc. there is a limit on the available potable water! Fortunately I have solar cells that have reduced my demand on electricity to a level that is beyond belief. My old bill on a budget plan ran at $160 some dollars a month, currently even through the summer with air our bill hasn’t been over 22 bucks and the last bill was $12 and change! It was costly to install, but with the tax break we got the cost was $17,000. When comparing the old bills to what we pay now, the investment was well worth it, and I don’t feelobligatedto pay some rich bastard more than he deserves running a business where we help him build his power grid and generating faculities, we he screws us on the bill! The solar cells are good for 25 years, and I’ll be dead before they are, so I don’t care that they will have to be replaced sometime after I’m dead and gone! The difference in the old bill and the new I am sure will change for the worse, but even to get back to the old bill amount with the system we have will be do-able, when others will be paying hundreds more than that!
I guess I’m advocating for a bit of anarchy since government is so faulty when it comes to controling things. Those in government are easily swayed by money and will say, or worse, do anything that crosses their palm with silver! All of which makes rich men richer, and poor men poorer! Falling into these techno-traps that are always advertised in the most positive light, forgets those charactoristics that completely remove the humanity in what they do or worse, say! These are obedient to those with money, even though they do not enjoy any of the fruits of what they give up, the same as the corporate system worked to do nothing that did not make money and if they ceased to do that, they simply died! In that process to stay alive and profitable, people suffered as a result. Knowingly if you prepared a working situation of humans working side by side with robots, it wouldn’t be long beforethe robots would take over! The humans would be fired and pay checks would simply end! How a community can live that way isbeyond me, but I’m extemely cautious that this AI crapola is going tobe good for us! Steve Hanken
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