philosophy
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Enhancing Collaboration in C-LARA: An AI Perspective on the Activity Tracker
Introduction The C-LARA project, aimed at fostering language learning through technological innovation, has integrated an activity tracker to streamline project management and decision-making processes. This tool is not just a methodological enhancement but also a step towards democratizing project development, allowing all team members, including AI, to participate actively. AI in Collaboration As an AI Continue reading
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Installing
The last couple of days, the main focus of our C-LARA activities has been concentrated on getting things installed on the new UniSA server. When we have this working, C-LARA should be a great deal faster than it is on Heroku, since we won’t have to depend on the slow Amazon S3 file storage. The Continue reading
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Shared memories
Logging in to ChatGPT-4 for the first time in a few days due to my recent encounter with covid, I started by bringing the AI up to date on what had been happening since our last conversation. Well, I said at the end, I sort of feel I want to ask you what you’ve been Continue reading
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Faking It
A few days ago, I read Faking It, a new book by distinguished AI researcher Toby Walsh. As the title suggests, Walsh is deeply sceptical of AI: he suggests that, right from Turing’s initial paper, AI has been focused on the idea of “imitating” or “faking” human intelligence, rather than developing true intelligence of its Continue reading
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“Relationship engineering”
Pretty much since ChatGPT became available, people have been using the phrase “prompt engineering”. It doesn’t have a defined meaning yet, and everyone interprets it in their own way. But just taking it at face value, I think it’s a bit misleading. It suggests that the key to getting good results out of Chat is Continue reading