For humans and robots. We invite all. 🤵🏻♂️
A dog groomer, a freelance designer, and a bottle of shampoo walk into a spreadsheet. The unsexy, specific, Tuesday-afternoon math that tells a small business owner whether they're making money — and how AI does it in a conversation instead of a cell.
Your mother doesn't need a tutorial on large language models. She needs someone to sit with her and show her how to ask the question she's been carrying around for three weeks. A practical guide for the adult children of curious retirees.
872 articles
An original framework for evaluating AI tools — covering ease of use, reliability, privacy, value, and what a-gnt looks for when reviewing tools.
The AI tools market in 2026 looks a lot like the mobile app market in 2010. There are hundreds of thousands of options, the quality varies wildly, and the average person has no reliable way to distinguish excellent tools from mediocre ones. App stores eventually solved this probl…
Everything people fear about AI today, they feared about the internet in 1995 — and understanding that pattern might be the most useful thing you can do right now.
On June 26, 1995, Newsweek published an article by astronomer Clifford Stoll titled "The Internet? Bah!" It opened with this sentence: "After two decades of online, I'm perplexed." Stoll proceeded to explain why the internet was overhyped, why online databases would never replace…
Twelve words that turn every AI interaction from a wall of jargon into something you actually understand. Works on taxes, medical results, legal documents, insurance — anything where the gap between expert language and human understanding is the problem.
A nuanced argument for why AI art and AI writing are not threats to human creativity — they are different things entirely, serving different functions, meaningful in different ways.