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Saturday, December 09, 2023

5 ChatGPT Prompts To Be More Present And Less Stressed In Your Business | The Year A.I. Ate the Internet | What is krav maga? | The Las Vegas Sphere Makes Virtual Reality a Full-Body Experience

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The Year A.I. Ate the Internet - The New Yorker   

A little more than a year ago, the world seemed to wake up to the promise and dangers of artificial intelligence when OpenAI released ChatGPT, an application that enables users to converse with a computer in a singularly human way. Within five days, the chatbot had a million users. Within two months, it was logging a hundred million monthly users—a number that has now nearly doubled. Call this the year many of us learned to communicate, create, cheat, and collaborate with robots.

Shortly after ChatGPT came out, Google released its own chatbot, Bard; Microsoft incorporated OpenAI’s model into its Bing search engine; Meta débuted LLaMA; and Anthropic came out with Claude, a “next generation AI assistant for your tasks, no matter the scale.” Suddenly, the Internet seemed nearly animate. It wasn’t that A.I. itself was new: indeed, artificial intelligence has become such a routine part of our lives that we hardly recognize it when a Netflix algorithm recommends a film, a credit-card company automatically detects fraudulent activity, or Amazon’s Alexa delivers a summary of the morning’s news.

But, while those A.I.s work in the background, often in a scripted and brittle way, chatbots are responsive and improvisational. They are also unpredictable. When we ask for their assistance, prompting them with queries about things we don’t know, or asking them for creative help, they often generate things that did not exist before, seemingly out of thin air. Poems, literature reviews, essays, research papers, and three-act plays are delivered in plain, unmistakably human language. It’s as if the god in the machine had been made in our image. Ask ChatGPT to write a song about self-driving cars in the style of Johnny Cash and you might get a lyric like this:

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What is krav maga? - The Economist   

GYMS IN ISRAEL that teach krav maga, an Israeli martial art, have seen enrolment soar following Hamas’s terror attacks on October 7th. Training in krav maga is up in other countries, too. Many of the new krav maga enthusiasts around the world are non-Jews, so media warnings about rising antisemitism are not the only explanation. Strong pro-Israeli feelings among some people are also playing a role. What is krav maga, and why has it become both popular and political?

Krav maga means “contact combat” in Hebrew. European Jews developed the fighting system in the 1930s to defend themselves in pogroms and from bullying by antisemites. Krav maga draws from a variety of older martial arts, including judo, karate and muay thai. But it also teaches how to parry modern threats. Students learn, for example, how to maintain control of a car if they are attacked by a passenger. In the 1950s the new Israeli state’s army adopted and refined krav maga. Today’s Israel Defence Forces (IDF) trains all recruits in the discipline. With military service obligatory for young citizens, krav maga has become strongly associated with Israeli culture.

Spiritual discipline and exquisite motor control are central to many martial arts. But krav maga is a “meat-and-potatoes” system. It uses simpler moves that harness instinctive gestures. These include strikes to a foe’s eyes, nose, throat and groin, the discipline’s signature moves. Such tactics would generally be against the rules in martial arts designed for competition rather than purely for self-defence. Other fighting systems can inflict more damage, and may look more elegant. Yet krav maga is easier to learn and to use in the heart-pounding frenzy of a real fight. Students learn to fight with objects at hand and in places where fancy techniques may be impossible to employ—not just in vehicles, but in water, on stairs and in a lift.

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