How to Make AI a Daily Habit Without Overthinking It
Most people treat AI as a novelty. The ones who benefit most treat it like a calculator — unremarkable, always there, indispensable.
Practical ways to put artificial intelligence to work in ordinary life.
Most people treat AI as a novelty. The ones who benefit most treat it like a calculator — unremarkable, always there, indispensable.
The biggest barrier to using AI isn't skill. It's the mistaken belief that you need some.
For most of human history, personalized instruction was a luxury of the wealthy. AI has made it available to anyone with a question and fifteen minutes.
A frightening medical situation is one of the worst moments to try to absorb complex technical information. AI can help you understand, prepare, and advocate for yourself — within important limits.
The cultural debate about AI and creativity is mostly conducted by people who haven't used it to make things. Here is what the ones who have actually say.
The best decisions are rarely made alone, and rarely in the moment of decision itself. AI has made the practice of deliberate, structured decision-thinking accessible at any time.
The privacy implications of AI assistants are real, not well understood, and vary significantly by product, tier, and how you use them. Here is a plain-language guide.
One short email a week: the most useful way to use AI in your everyday life, plus a money or productivity idea worth trying.