Showing posts with label AI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AI. Show all posts
Sunday, July 27, 2025
Kelli Ballard: Will Artificial Intelligence Replace Journalism?
Labels: AI, Journalism, Kelli BallardThe dangers of incorporating AI into the news product.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is the way of the world now. It is gaining use and popularity in just about every aspect of our lives. From medical advancements to entertainment, it is reshaping society even as it battles controversy and skepticism. For one thing, this emerging technology does not have enough oversight, and no one knows for sure what the long-term repercussions might be. For another, AI makes it easy to spread disinformation, further eroding the trust people have in the news. So, why are so many news outlets turning to artificial intelligence to deliver their information?
Monday, June 30, 2025
Dr Michael Johnston: The Johnston test for human intelligence
Labels: AI, Dr Michael Johnston, Educational process, Human intelligencePhilosophers love to dream up strange scenarios to get us thinking. They call these scenarios ‘thought experiments.’
In 1980, philosopher John Searle published his ‘Chinese room’ thought experiment. Searle asked his readers to imagine someone who understands no Chinese sitting alone in a room with a very large book.
The book contains instructions for manipulating Chinese symbols, to produce a plausible response to any statement or question written in Chinese.
Wednesday, April 9, 2025
Dr Eric Crampton: Tariffs, AI, and the certainty of volatility
Labels: AI, Dr Eric Crampton, Forecasting the economy, TariffsI am always glad that I am not an economic forecaster.
Most people’s exposure to economists is radio or newspaper bits from bank economists making their best guesses about economic growth, the unemployment rate, or the track for interest rates.
Tuesday, February 4, 2025
Point of Order: Buzz from the Beehive 4/2/25
Labels: AI, Antarctica, Climate change, Cook Strait ferries, Cost of Living, COVID-19 Inquiry, ETS, health, Job seekers, Law and Order, Ngāpuhi settlement, Point of Order, Rail electrificationClimate change minister froze out farm leaders – but (is he a closet greenie?) warmed to Greenpeace and WWF lobbyists
Your monitors of the Beehive website can tell you what ministers are up to so long as they post a press statement. They can’t tell you what ministers have been doing which they shouldn’t have been doing, if they keep quiet about it. And they can’t tell you what minister haven’t been doing that they should have been doing.
Monday, October 7, 2024
Joanne Nova: First hint of energy squeeze and Big Tech drops the wind and solar purity.....
Labels: AI, Big Tech, Joanne Nova, Nuclear PowerFirst hint of energy squeeze and Big Tech drops the wind and solar purity, and launches into nuclear power
All those sustainable dreams, gone pfft
Google, Oracle, Microsoft were all raving fans of renewable energy, but all of them have given up trying to reach “net zero” with wind and solar power. In the rush to feed the baby AI gargoyle, instead of lining the streets with wind turbines and battery packs, they’re all suddenly buying, building and talking about nuclear power. For some reason, when running $100 billion dollar data centres, no one seems to want to use random electricity and turn them on and off when the wind stops. Probably because without electricity AI is a dumb rock.
Saturday, June 22, 2024
Dr Michael Johnston: Knowledge is the foundation of critical thinking
Labels: AI, Dr Michael Johnston, Virtual teaching assistantNew technology typically inspires both utopian dreams and dystopian fears. AI is a salient example of this optimism-pessimism dichotomy.
This week, the New Zealand Initiative released a new report, exploring the implications of AI for education. Welcome to the Machine analyses the risks utopian thinking about AI poses to education. But the report does not take a dystopian view. It also explores promising potential for teachers to use AI productively.
Tuesday, June 18, 2024
Dr Michael Johnston: Welcome to the machine - opportunities and risks of generative Artificial Intelligence for education
Labels: AI, Dr Michael Johnston, EducationThis report calls for a science-based approach to using artificial intelligence (AI) in classrooms. This will help schools get the most out of AI while reducing risks to teaching and learning.
Welcome to the Machine: Opportunities and Risks of Generative Artificial Intelligence for Education, written by Senior Fellow Dr Michael Johnston, will help educators and policymakers navigate the rapidly evolving landscape of AI in education.
Tuesday, June 11, 2024
Paul Henry: "I think this country is deeply in the sh*t."
Labels: AI, Boldness, Education, Innovation, Paul Henry, State of the Nation, unemploymentInfectiously funny, thoughtful and passionate Guest Speaker Paul Henry delivers his address at ACT's annual rally, Change Makers.
Friday, May 24, 2024
Mike's Minute: Is AI really the future?
Labels: AI, Mike HoskingDespite the cost-of-living crisis, one industry seemingly not hit is that of the pollster.
There are new numbers out this week on AI.
AI is changing the world, upending the world, taking your job, re-organising your life... or it might do none of that.
Saturday, October 14, 2023
Robert MacCulloch: The Boy from Rotorua who Changed the World. How? We Don't Know Yet.
Labels: AI, DeepMind, Robert MacCulloch, Shane LeggForget fancy pants folks growing up in posh suburbs in the likes of London, New York, Shanghai, Tokyo or Dubai. People who change the world can come from anywhere, any background. Take local boy, Shane Legg, who was a student at Rotorua Lakes High School. He is incredibly low key and yet gave up his time to quietly meet up with me in London many years ago during which we discussed some of NZ's long-standing constraints.
Thursday, September 28, 2023
Jon Miltimore: Why We Shouldn't Fear AI Destroying Hundreds of Millions of Jobs
Labels: AI, Artificial Intelligence, ChatGPT, Foundation for Economic Education (FEE), Jobs, Jon MiltimoreI recently saw a quote on Facebook attributed to Sigmund Freud that I was going to share on social media.
“One day, in retrospect, the years of struggle will strike you as the most beautiful,” the quote read.
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