Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 35: How Students Can Use AI to Solve Everyday Problems

Episode Date: June 12, 2023

What role will AI play for students? Today we explore the world of AI in education with guest Nikunj Tyagi, an Undergraduate Student University of Illinois. We discuss how universities are teaching AI... and how students can use AI to solve everyday problems.Time Stamps:[00:00:16] Is AI advancing too quickly?[00:02:00] AI is changing the game for job seekers[00:03:00] Using AI art to generate celebrity couple's kids[00:04:00] Introduction of  Nikunj Tyagi[00:04:20] Are students using AI the right way?[00:06:25] AI makes app development accessible to all[00:09:55] How college gives a deep understanding of major topics[00:12:32] AI in education: cool or dangerous?[00:16:48] College network provides valuable connections for growth[00:20:27] AI helps build discipline and solve problems[00:24:37] AI enhancing education and emerging technology fields[00:26:34] AI helps students and creatives learn betterFor full show notes, head to YourEverydayAI.comTopics Covered in this Episode:Topic 1: AI Education in Universities- AI being presented as both dangerous and beneficial by many universities.- AI being taught to students at a freshman/sophomore level.- Classes on machine learning, AI ethics, and practical applications of AI using Python libraries and machine learning foundations.Topic 2: The Future of Programming- The shift of programming from machine code to compiled languages like C++, and now towards creating apps without code using AI.- The future potential of not requiring understanding code, just the ability to think of what to create using AI.- The use of Chat GBT with university/college learning to build useful products faster.Topic 3: AI Beyond Education- Potential future uses of AI in education, including using it to check for cheating, creating curriculums, and introducing new classes.- Uses of AI in biotechnology with prosthetic limbs to sense and respond to neural messages from the body.- Changes to the job application process through AI and automation.Topic 4: AI Literacy- The value of building a network and making connections with other students and alumni.- The role and importance of AI ethics in the future.Topic 5: Practical Advice on AI- Use of AI language models for creating schedules and studying technical subjects like physics.- Ideas on how chat GPT can help students in their lives without app development knowledge.Topic 6: Independent Use of AI- Using AI to tackle repetitive tasks while working on harder things.- Warning against relying too much on AI as it may prevent learning and developing valuable skills.Topic 7: Chat with You and App Development- The story of how the speaker and their friends developed an app to help college students find events on campus.- Chat with You's contribution towards learning to develop the app using different development platforms.Keywords:AI, Prometheus, dangerous, beneficial, universities, students, freshman, sophomore, courses, machine learning, AI ethics, MRI brain tumor detector, Python libSend Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info) Start Here ▶️Not sure where to start when it comes to AI? Start with our Start Here Series. You can listen to the first drop -- Episode 691 -- or get free access to our Inner Cricle community and all episodes: StartHereSeries.com Also, here's a link to the entire series on a Spotify playlist. 

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is the Everyday AI Show, the everyday podcast where we simplify AI and bring its power to your fingertips. Listen daily for practical advice to boost your career, business, and everyday life. Meet Firefly AI Assistant, now live and Adobe Firefly, the all-in-one creative AI studio. Just describe what you want to create and the assistant handles the rest, orchestrating multi-step workflows across Photoshop, Premiere Express, and more in one conversational interface. You direct the outcome. The assistant accelerates execution. How should students be using AI? Are they only using chat GPT and really not even getting at the tip of the iceberg? That's one of the things that we're going to be talking about today on everyday AI.
Starting point is 00:00:58 My name's Jordan Wilson. I'm your host. We're going to be talking about a lot of things that have to do with using AI, not just in the classroom, but how students could be using it in general. But before we do, let's run down the news. Real quick, everything that's going on in the world of AI. And as a reminder, go to your everyday AI.com. Sign up for our newsletter. So not only do we have a live stream going on right now where you can ask myself and the guest questions, but we have a podcast on Spotify, Apple Music, everything else,
Starting point is 00:01:28 and the daily newsletter. So make sure you go check that out. So let's quickly dive in and talk about what's happening in the world of AI news. So 16 minutes last night had Google CEO Sundar Pu Chai. on. Side note, I'm a big 60 Minutes fan, and I haven't watched the full episode yet. I'm going to get to it.
Starting point is 00:01:48 But very interesting, reading the recap of what they were talking about, just saying, is AI advancing too quickly and talking about Google's impact on jobs? So we're going to be linking that in the newsletter today. However, here's my take. Is AI advancing too quickly? Yes and no. I think it's moving quickly, but I don't think that, especially here in the U.S., we should be slowing it down because I think right now it's something that's really powering our economy.
Starting point is 00:02:16 You know, if you look at our economy over the last six months, a lot of the growth has been driven by companies like Google, Microsoft, and Nvidia, the ones who are actually pushing AI. So kind of the next story to dive into here quick is a C-NET article talking about how AI is just changing the game for job seekers. So it's talking about how now the job application process is completely different than it's been in years past. So really talking about how to leverage AI in automation and just understanding what the job application process is like. So it's, you know, saying how do we even compete with kind of the rise of robots and
Starting point is 00:02:58 are we even applying to humans? It's very, very interesting. So we're going to share more in the newsletter. Here's what I'd say. I'd say for a long time in the job application process, you know, you haven't always been applying to humans anyways. You know, companies, you know, big recruiting firms have been using a lot of kind of AI, but different processes that you aren't even really applying to a human off the bat. I think job seekers know this. So more on the newsletter. And kind of the third kind of top AI story
Starting point is 00:03:30 that we wanted to talk about today, kind of a fun one. So we're going to share about this. Make sure to check out these images. Very cool. So in an artist kind of shared this, I think this originated, on Twitter over the weekend. So imagining celebrity kids using AI. So very, very interesting and kind of like if you look at it, it is shocking. So taking any two random celebrities and asking mid-journey using a prompt to say, hey, what would it look like if these two celebrities had a kid? So it kind of set the internet slightly on fire over the weekend.
Starting point is 00:04:08 This thing was trending all over the place. So we're going to share some of the best results in the newsletter today. So as a reminder, we do have a guest today. But before we bring our guests on, make sure if you have a comment, if you want to talk about how we're using AI in universities, make sure to drop a comment. So with that, we're going to bring on our guest for today. So Nakunj Tiagi is a sophomore student at the University of Illinois here in Champaign. This show kind of originates from Chicago. So we have a kind of local guy in Nkuj.
Starting point is 00:04:44 Nkuj, thank you for joining the show. Yeah, hey, Jordan. How's it going? Thanks for having me on. All right. I'm excited. I'm excited. So let's dive into it.
Starting point is 00:04:53 So let's start at the top. AI. Are students using it how you think they should be? Yeah. So mainly ChadGVT is being used, as you know, to write essays to get through quick homeworks. But no, I don't think it's being used. so it's full extent, how it should be.
Starting point is 00:05:12 A lot of kids can be, first of all, making a lot of money with AI, launching cool businesses, cool projects. And I think it can be used to learn a lot faster than it is being used right now. Rather than being used to kind of cheat and power through homework assignments, I think it could be used a lot better in, like, how to learn quickly and how to have something else do the, like, quick stuff for you, but you learning the big picture and, like, the conceptual things that are kind of tough to grasp sometimes. Yeah, for sure. And, you know, Amon just had a comment, actually had Amon on the show Friday.
Starting point is 00:05:43 You know, she said she's excited and waiting for new perspectives. I think Nekuz you have it. But first, let's talk about like what's your major? Because I want to talk about that and kind of translate what that means for other college students. So what's kind of your major and what are you hoping to kind of get to in the long run after college? Yeah. So I'm majoring in computer science. And I'm hoping to get more into the AI entrepreneurship space in the future.
Starting point is 00:06:08 And I'm doing a lot of experimentation. right now working on projects and just like talking to different people and hopefully get there one day. But yeah, I'm just kind of building the skill set and trying to work my way up towards that goal. Yeah. So I think, I think Nekunj, like when people think computer science, right, and people might be hearing you talk about all these different projects that you're working on. And they're saying, oh, of course, this makes sense because you're a computer science person, right? So they just assume that it's, you know, all these things are highly technical in advance and hard. for the everyday person to kind of take advantage of.
Starting point is 00:06:43 Do you think it's like that? Do you think a student can, you know, maybe who's not a computer science background or maybe they aren't highly technical, can they still really tap into the power of AI? Yeah. So that's one of the great things about things like Chad UVT now. I'm seeing a lot of, like I'm taking a few innovation classes and CS classes. I'm seeing a bunch of artists getting in on that. And the reason is because you don't need UIUX engineers like software engineers to work on
Starting point is 00:07:09 things like apps anymore. You can have like graphic designers that know how to use Adobe Photoshop and illustrate to like work on like the overall design of your app and AI can write the code for you. Like you can go on to Chad GBT and put in the image of your Figma's or whatever and say write out the code for this and it'll do it like almost perfectly. So I think that's a that's a that's a really big space in AI that's not being tapped right now using chat GPT to make things like apps to make websites to make cool web three products like it's all possible using AI and students really need to get in on this now yeah kind of uman just left a comment saying she uses it to summarize notes to outline reports that's a great use case um you uh Nkuj what would you so you know you kind
Starting point is 00:07:58 of referenced you know making apps and i think that people who aren't very technical they think of that as a very uh a very technical project but you just kind of outlined it's not. You know, you can use chat GPT and, you know, very beginner-friendly programs like Figma to get an app off the ground. And that's something that you and some of your friends are doing. So talk a little bit kind of about the app that you're even building right now. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:24 So me and our friends, we started this app a few months ago at the beginning of the last semester. And what we're kind of doing is we're kind of finding a way for college students to find the best events every night on campus. And right now it's in colleges. Soon we hope to be in cities and stuff. But when we started building this app, we had no experience in app development whatsoever. Like we're computer science students that know how to code.
Starting point is 00:08:49 The app development is a different monster altogether. So we kind of get in. We're watching a bunch of YouTube videos, trying to familiarize ourselves in the concepts. But learning a whole new language and interface and like X-Code, Swift, all of this was like so new to us. So what we started doing is we'd watch videos and write our own code. and then we'd find ourselves with a bunch of errors that we had no idea how to tackle.
Starting point is 00:09:11 So we'd put into Chad GPT and we'd say, here's our code, here's our errors, can you help me to fix it? And ChadGBT would give really detailed responses on what the issue was exactly, how we can tackle it, and how we can avoid this error next time. So using Chad GPT, we not only started making the brief outline of our app, and we not only started to kind of build the foundation of our app, But we also started to learn how to properly use Xcode and Swift. And now I can say for sure that I'm very fluent in Swift.
Starting point is 00:09:41 I can use Xcode. I can, if you give me a prompt for an app, I'm like 100% certain that I can build it now. And this is because of how helpful Chad GPT has been in helping me learn kind of like the foundational elements of Swift and Xcode. And I'm certain that I can do this for anything like Flutter, Android Studio, any app development platform, it can help you with that. Here's a question I wasn't thinking of, but just came up on my mind. Do you think that, I mean, maybe not now, but maybe in the future, do you think that tools like chat GPT, you know, like Google's BARD, do you think that these are going to become as important or maybe even more important than college?
Starting point is 00:10:24 Maybe not as much as college. Because in college, what's happening is you're taking a lot of classes that a lot of people say are useless, you know? like I just took a computer architecture class, like diving deep into like the fundamentals of how the insides of a computer are wired and built. And it seems like you're not going to need that in a job. But the point of it is to really give you a deep understanding of what your exact major is.
Starting point is 00:10:47 So when you're met with like a foundational question, you know how to work from the ground up. So I think Chad GPT is a good way for you to learn the basics of something quick and something that like like Xcode, you don't need to know all of computer science for that. You need to know how to use X code and use SWIF. So it can help with things like that. But I think what's revolutionary about it is at first,
Starting point is 00:11:10 what was revolutionary was just knowing how to talk to a machine. Like writing like a very difficult code sequence in like machine code, like assembly code like MIPS or something and having a computer just understand what that means. Then after that it was really revolutionary to have languages like C++ where you can compile and actually have code that comes. comes out and like see what you're building right um and now what's going to start happening using a i is we're going to have uh we're going to be able to write code build apps build uh projects
Starting point is 00:11:40 without even needing code we're going to be able to put in prompts like build me an app that does so and so and you'll see the app come up without you having to write a single line of code and that's what's going to start happening maybe maybe the future generations aren't going to have to uh like even understand code. They're just going to need to think about what to create. So I think the faster we can get in on chat GPT and use that with our university and college learning, the faster we can get to building revolutionary products that help humanity and get people to living faster and more comfortable lives. Yeah, I love that. So let's talk a little bit to rewind there about 20 seconds. So even just talking about how AI or chat GPT, whatever you want to say, is being used in universities,
Starting point is 00:12:29 you know, across the country right now. So it sounds like, you know, at least you of I is offering a lot of, you know, um, AI immersion, uh, you know, kind of like what we talked about before the show, getting you guys plugged in all over the place. But outside of that, how do you think just across the country maybe, I'm sure you are talking to your friends that go to other colleges, how is AI being presented in the university setting? Is it, hey, don't use it. Hey, only use it under these circumstances. What's it like now for a student?
Starting point is 00:13:01 Yeah, so Mark Andresen actually recently published an article in which he compared the use of AI to be and like that being taught to students like Prometheus bringing fire to the humans, you know? Like it's a very dangerous thing. Fire can, it can build really cool things. It can also destroy. And AI is being presented just like that in many universities around the world. And U of I is really picking up on this. So U of I is one of the schools that's bringing a lot of software engineers to Silicon Valley
Starting point is 00:13:32 and bringing a lot of entrepreneurs as well. And AI is being taught to us at a freshman sophomore level. So I just took a class. It was my freshman year last year. And I took a class in which we were able to build an MRI brain tumor detector. And we learned the foundations of machine learning using a pie. different Python libraries to, and we were able to take in brain MRI scans, and it would output with a 93% accuracy, whether the brain MRI had a tumor or not. And that was a really
Starting point is 00:14:00 cool project to work on. It was very difficult, but we had some great guidance. And we have great classes that build up on that, which I didn't even think was possible. But yeah, we have cool intro to machine learning, AI, and then AI ethics as well, which is very important. It's doing a really good job on not just teaching like how it can be used, but teaching us how to be AI literate and teaching us how like the actual math behind it and then how the code that we write after the math is is outputing like the stuff that we know about, not just like us like knowing a few like a few terms from library and being able to output that using like chat you can keep. Yeah. So it's that's a great analogy, right. So talking about AI kind of being fire and it can do a great good or great,
Starting point is 00:14:46 you know, can be destructive. How would you, how would you encourage other students, maybe those that don't have as technical of a background as you, how would you encourage them to better use AI to kind of solve problems in their everyday life? Adobe just introduced an entirely new way to create, bringing the power and precision of its creative suite into one conversational experience. Meet Firefly AI Assistant, now live in the Adobe Firefly app. the all-in-one creative AI studio.
Starting point is 00:15:23 Powered by Adobe's creative agent, Firefly AI assistant lets you start with your vision, just describe what you want, and shape the outcome as it takes form with the assistant. The assistant orchestrates multi-step workflows, drawing on 60 plus pro-grade tools across Adobe Creative Cloud apps, including Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere, Lightroom Express, and more to help bring your ideas to life.
Starting point is 00:15:47 You can also get started with creative skills, a growing library of pre-built workflows for common creative tasks, like batch editing photos, creating mood boards, portrait retouching, and creating social variations. Every step the assistant takes is visible, so you can refine, redirect, or take over at any time. You stay in the driver's seat as the creative director. Adobe Firefly AI assistant now in public beta.
Starting point is 00:16:13 See it today at firefly.adopi.com. Yeah, so I'd say anytime you have a question, anytime you have a foundational question about anything that you're interested in, go to Chad GPT, whether it's like you're in a rabbit hole about like deep space physics or something, just go to Chad GPT and ask it as many questions as possible because it's like the teacher that you don't have standing right next to you, right? Like you have so much knowledge infused in one in one website or whatever so you can really use that to its full extent. And I'd say beyond that, start working on passion projects because now more than ever, like yes, internships and making
Starting point is 00:16:52 money are important, but you also have the opportunity to work on cool projects that either make you money or teach you a lot more about a certain subject. Use chat GVT for that. Use it to teach you how to build something, how to scale it, whether it's a podcast, whether it's an app, try using chat DVT and seeing how far it gets you. And then from there, even if it doesn't work out, at least you'll have learned a skill that not many other students are doing right now. Yeah, that's such good advice. Like I hope so many students are listening to what Nacuzh is talking about here. So a couple of comments and questions. I want to get it to.
Starting point is 00:17:30 Ellington, just saying great work. Thank you. Jupiter, just saying, teaching us to be AI literate. That's such a good, Nukungi, I love how you said it. You're either literate or not in AI. And it's not hard to take the steps. Professor Muhammad, just saying keep it up. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:17:51 Iman, actually, Amon had a good question here. So let's tackle this. And again, if you're listening and if you have a question for Nacuzh, just talking about how AI is being used in universities, please drop a question here. So there's a lot of questions. Let's just tackle the first half. So Amon is asking,
Starting point is 00:18:09 but how will people without knowledge of tech and app development keep up with all these changing trends? It's a great question. Because Nukuz, I'm sure people, maybe even some of your classmates are hearing this, And they're like, oh, this is great, great idea, but I'm not highly technical. So how can students who aren't very technical use kind of AI outside of just how they're using it, which is to write papers?
Starting point is 00:18:32 How can they do that? Yeah, so I think what's great about the structure of universities and colleges, a lot of people have said this before, but I'll say it again just for the sake of like how it fits in. It's paying a lot more than the knowledge. You're paying for a great network and connections. And these are buzzwords, I know. I'm really seeing after my first year at U of I, how many cool people I've met. I've met like really cool people that are working within like quant firms or like AI spaces or
Starting point is 00:19:00 blockchain. And all these people have one thing that is similar. They all go out of their way to meet cool people. And from these cool people, you can learn things and you can get in on things. Suppose there's someone else building an app in your college and you're a graphic designer. You can go up to that person, say here's the cool stuff I've made. If you want, I can help you with your app. I can help draw up the Figma UIUX designs.
Starting point is 00:19:24 And then from there, we can work on something really cool together. And then using that network that you have, you can build some really cool things with people. And without having that technical literacy at the start, you can start developing that just by talking to people, just by working with them. And I think a lot of colleges have this, but U of I is one that really does this at a high level. They have a Silicon Valley trip, which is where you meet the alumni of your college. that are working in Silicon Valley, either as CEOs, either as high-end C-suite executives. But I had a chance to go on that,
Starting point is 00:19:57 and I met some really, really cool people, and I met some really cool alumni, too. We met Tom Siebel, who's the CEO of C3 AI. We met the CTO of Scale AI, which are two huge AI firms. And each of them were driving home on very similar topics. Number one, understand how to, use AI and passion projects,
Starting point is 00:20:21 work on really cool stuff that not other students that not many other students are working on, read a lot of AI books and finally understand AI ethics and just talk with people, have debates, get on podcasts, and discuss how AI can be used in the right direction.
Starting point is 00:20:37 Because if we do not talk about this now, it might end up being the destructive version of fire that the gods warn from atheists about. Yeah. Students or anyone, If you're just looking to learn, like, you should just literally be taking notes of what Nkuj is saying right now. Like coming from someone on the other side, right? Like, I've been out of school for a very long time.
Starting point is 00:21:00 But the advice and the practical steps that you're laying out for can be so beneficial for students right now. It's crazy. So make sure that you're listening to this right down what Nekuja is saying. But I do have one more question. And if anyone else listening has any questions, please, please. leave a comment. But my kind of last question is this, Nacuz. So we talk about, I think there's different levels that students can be using AI, right? And I think you laid out ones that aren't even very difficult, you know, even in terms of like, hey, it's not technically that hard to get an app
Starting point is 00:21:36 off the ground. You know, if you can collaborate and take advantage of all these resources that your college probably has. But I'm going to hit rewind because we know that probably every single student is using chat GPT. So maybe what? what's one or two, kind of new or exciting use cases for chat GPT that maybe the everyday student can use outside of just, hey, write my paper. Maybe things that can really help them in their everyday life that don't really have to do with anything, you know, developing an app or, you know, creating software or something like that.
Starting point is 00:22:09 What would those, you know, one or two pieces of advice be? Yeah. So I think one really cool thing is you can have it help you build discipline. in your everyday life. So a lot of things college students struggle with is like something like getting up early, having a fit schedule where like you're allocating time to learning, like developing and spending time with friends. So if you put in a list of every single thing that you're doing, and then like you say I want to wake up at this time, I want to go to bed at this time, it'll give you a nice like hour by hour schedule and like when to fit in food, when to fit in classes, when to fit in this,
Starting point is 00:22:44 that, which I think is really cool. And I think another really cool thing that it can help you with is if you ask it to, like in your classes that you're taking, so yes, you can ask it to write you essays, but you can also ask it to write you essays to help you learn. So if you're, like, suppose you're in physics and you're, you're trying to learn the specific way to do a problem, you can put in like the exact question, like that is being asked to you. And you can ask it, teach me the fundamental basics of this problem and a step-by-step approach on how I can solve it. And it gives you a very technical and detailed approach. And with Chad GPT 3.5, the answer is not always correct, but you can use the steps on how to get there,
Starting point is 00:23:27 which is usually correct. But with GPT4, actually, I found that the answer is almost always correct. Like, it's frightening how, like in two seconds, they'll literally give you the right answer to a very difficult problem, which is pretty cool. Yeah. It's amazing advice because, yeah, I think a lot of students, you know, whether it's when they first step on a college campus or when their kind of schedule starts to ramp up, it becomes, it can become hard. But yeah, like Nakuna said, you can literally copy and paste your schedule, say, here's what's going well for me. Here's my struggles, you know, help me on a day-to-day basis. And yeah, chat GPT can literally just be kind of a life tutor.
Starting point is 00:24:07 So a couple questions here that we'll get to. So, Amad is asking what ethical considerations should students be aware of when using AI for everyday problems? What would you say are some ethical considerations, Nukunsch? So one thing I've been thinking about a lot recently is how much do I want AI to do for me? Because a lot of times you can get into like a flow state where you're just like doing something and you're like you're put into chat GPT and then you just like output it and then you work on the next thing. and then while ChadGBT is like generating the other problem that you're working on. So I think you find ways to become independent of chat DBT and independent of AI and have AI become dependent on us.
Starting point is 00:24:52 So everything that AI is like creating everything it's doing needs to be based on prompts that like it might not have seen before. So it's like you're using it to do things that are repetitive and boring for you that you already know how to do. And you're working on tackling harder things that you may not. know about because if you use it to write like all of your code if you use it to write all of your essays then you're getting to a space where you're not really learning anything yourself and in a few years like you may not realize it now but in a few years you might find that you don't have the skills you don't have any value compared to any other like student down like like at any other university
Starting point is 00:25:29 right so we need to use chaty vt to learn we need to use it to create but we should not use it to become us otherwise we're in a very dangerous space where uh like Students aren't as important anymore, and Chad DBT does all of the work needed for us. Yeah, that's deep, right? Like you almost want to be able to use it in almost every aspect of your life when you see the output and how powerful it can be. But, you know, that's a great point. You know, at what point do you need to, you know, hit pause on that? Or just take an extra couple of minutes, an extra couple of hours to really ingest it and to make sure that you're actually soaking it up.
Starting point is 00:26:09 and not just regurgitating, you know, not just copy and pasting. So our last question here. So what are some future possibilities for AI and education that students should be aware of? Great question. Interesting. So I think some future possibilities for AI and education would be that teachers are actually going to start using AI as well, whether it's going to be AI detectors to check if you're cheating or not, or whether it's going to be creating curriculums and having, like,
Starting point is 00:26:39 like classes, like being framed out by AI, which means that if teachers start doing this, if projects are like kind of being introduced by AI, then you're going to have everybody using the same framework to teach a concept, which in some ways can be really helpful, actually, because everything that you're teaching is like the teachers teaching it using AI and the students are learning it also using AI. So that can be really cool. And I think we can also start seeing really cool emergence of classes, which haven't been thought of before, like using AI to like navigate social media or something, like being able to like create viral videos with AI and or viral like using photography and
Starting point is 00:27:23 with AI, right? Because Photoshop has some really cool things right now where you can like kind of like highlight an element and then you can use AI to like fix it completely for you. Instead of having to go through the rigorous task in Adobe Photoshop to actually go through. and like correct every little blemish. So I think just having like different fields, like subfields, talk about AI is really cool. I know a friend who's doing bioengineering at Ui right now. They're talking a lot about AI in their like ECE class,
Starting point is 00:27:53 like electrical engineering classes. And talking about how different chips in biotechnology right now are being used to integrate AI within like things like prosthetic limbs. So like it senses like the neural like messages that you're sending to. body and using that I can like like raise a finger on the prosthetic machine or something. These technologies have been out for a while. But now that AI is something that is so easy to use, people are really working on teaching that and we should work on learning that.
Starting point is 00:28:22 Yeah, love that. And you know, as we wrap things up here, Jupiter, great, great comment, you know, AI will help creatives be more creative. Yeah, I think, you know, even, you know, what, what Nacuzh is saying, I think it's just going to help students become better students if you can actually use it and leverage it. And that's what this show is all about. Nkouge, we had so many questions, so many thoughts, so many hot takes. I love it.
Starting point is 00:28:45 Thank you so much for coming on the show. I really appreciate it. Yeah, thank you for having me, Jordan. It was awesome. All right. So just as a reminder, go to Your EverydayAI.com. Sign up for the newsletter. We're going to be sharing some links and some more information about some of the things that Nekunge was talking about.
Starting point is 00:29:03 And we do this every single day. So we're going to have a lot of guests for the rest of the week. You know, and make sure to, if you are watching this live, check out the podcast, subscribe, all that good stuff. Can't wait to see you all back tomorrow and every day on everyday AI. Thank you. Yep. See ya. Meet Firefly AI Assistant.
Starting point is 00:29:29 Now live in Adobe Firefly, the Allman One Creative AI Studio. Just describe what you want to create in your own words and the assistant handles the rest, orchestrating multi-step workflows across Adobe Creative Cloud apps, including Photoshop, Premier Express, and more in one conversational interface. You direct the outcome while the assistant accelerates execution. Stand control with the ability to step in and refine at any time. See it today at firefly.adobie.com. And that's a wrap for today's edition of Everyday AI.
Starting point is 00:30:06 Thanks for joining us. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave us a rating. It helps keep us going. For a little more AI magic, visit Your EverydayAI.com and sign up to our daily newsletter so you do. don't get left behind. Go break some barriers and we'll see you next time.

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