Day: April 10, 2026

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Sometimes their songs are first thing to cue you in theat they are there

Sunday April 11, 2021 — Education

Inflation Soared to 3.3% in March, Driven by Higher Gasoline Costs – WSJ

Inflation Soared to 3.3% in March, Driven by Higher Gasoline Costs – WSJ

Consumer prices soared in March, pushed higher by skyrocketing gasoline prices. The numbers

Consumer prices were up 3.3% in March from a year earlier, the Labor Department said Friday, much hotter than February’s gain of 2.4%.

It was the highest reading in two years. But it was also in line with the expectations of economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal. Inflation Soared to 3.3% in March, Putting the Fed in a Tight Spot You may also like Your browser does not support HTML5 video.

The Ghost in the Machine is My New Intern πŸ“

Let’s be honest: I have trust issues. The idea of outsourcing my brain to a remote server I can’t see or control makes my inner skeptic twitch. Yet, here we are. Over the last few months, the internet has become a buffet of free Artificial Intelligence, and I’ve finally picked up a plate.

I haven’t fully surrendered to our robot overlords yet, but I’ve learned to love the leverage.

Why I’m Letting a Bot Hold the Pen πŸ€–

Writing is hard. Proofreading is harder. AI has become the ultimate “force multiplier” for my creative process. It allows me to generate content with significantly less manual labor. Here is the reality of our new partnership:

  • Grammar Without the Headache: It usually spits out text that is syntactically sound, saving me from the “did I use the right ‘their’?” death spiral.
  • The Ultimate Explainer: It leverages the entire internet to flesh out concepts that sit just outside my personal expertise.
  • Copyright Freedom: Since AI-generated content isn’t copyrightable, I can mold, mash, and publish it however I please.
  • Concept Expansion: I provide the sparkβ€”the thoughts and core ideasβ€”and the AI handles the heavy lifting of elaboration.

The “Customer is Always Right” Problem ⚠

Working with AI is a bit like managing a very talented, very sycophantic intern. It has some quirks that drive me up the wall:

  • The “Pleasant” Filter: AI has an annoyingly “artificial” voice. It’s often overly sentimental and pathologically eager to please.
  • Blind Obedience: If I tell an AI the moon is made of spare ribs, it will likely agree and provide a recipe for BBQ sauce. It defers to the user even when the user is objectively wrong.
  • The Hallucination Factor: It makes mistakes. Bold, confident, flat-out lies.

How I Keep the Human in the Loop ✍

I don’t let the bot go wild. My process is less “autopilot” and more “power steering.”

I treat AI outputs as a rough draftβ€”a lump of clay that needs a human touch. I carefully monitor every sentence. I edit out the fluff, correct the “hallucinations,” and strip away that weirdly polished, robotic tone to make sure the final post actually sounds like me.

It’s a strange new world, but having a partner that never gets tired and knows almost everything? It’s kind of greatβ€”as long as I’m the one holding the leash.