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Itai Leibowitz's avatar

I love these articles that encourage people to think about AI as a person. Not because it is or isn't a person, but because we naturally know how to interact with people, and that mindset makes it easier to approach working with AI.

Here are a couple of additional thoughts to consider based on my experience:

1. This intern is a super-intern! They majored in every subject, from English to Engineering. So they can teach you a thing or two as well! For example, my intern taught me how to code and is currently trying to teach me some marketing.

2. Instead of an intern, also try to consider this alien as your teammate. While you might dismiss ideas from your intern, you might be more open to ideas from your respected teammate. For example: ask your teammate to give you ten ideas for something you're working on together - you might find some gems there.

3. Even for "just me" tasks, maybe some of them could benefit from a second look, some non-judgmental feedback, or polish. For example - when writing this comment, I asked ChatGPT for feedback, and it said I could provide specific examples :)

I love the humanizing analogies because they make it natural to see how you might benefit from having more "people" on your team. And the intern analogy hints at maintaining appropriate oversight of the AI's work. I've found "teammate" to be another valuable analogy. This article has me thinking if there are more I haven't considered yet! Any thoughts?

Oh, and, If you read all the way here, you might find this interesting: My "AI teammate" and I write about our experience working together on a project. So far, we've worked on planning, coding, making videos, and writing. Check it out for some more specific ideas and examples: https://dearai.substack.com/p/introduction

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Conor Grennan's avatar

Intern is a great term here- I find over and over again that people stop using ChatGPT the moment they get a wrong or overly simplistic answer. Their brain tells them "ChatGPT is great at XYZ but can't handle this more complex topic" and they move on. Which you would never do if brainstorming with a human. It has the answers in there, it just requires some patience to tease it out. So maybe it's an intern with potential: Gonna get some stuff wrong, but boy oh boy, when it gets it right...

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