Fully agree, that’s how I see most of my less technical coworkers reason about using AI. “Is there a Claude skill for that?” is a question I hear multiple times a week. I see a lot of comments (incl 2 sibling comments)…
Unfortunately this seems quite plausible from today’s POV. As the old saying goes if you don’t want to be the product, you’ll have to pay for it. And I see only a silver of people being rich enough to afford and…
Working in selection, I can say it’s more nuanced than that. Any measurement can be used as long as it is relevant to the business and related to performance. For example, you’re fine to reject people based on height if…
A greatly written article! Really a masterclass of (1) getting the point across and (2) being emotionally engaging all the while not requiring me to have a PhD in pharmacology to understand it.
Seems interesting but testing myself only yields my results? How would I compare the result to a frontier model, that part seems to be missing? Also, the tests seem to be heavily skewed in favor of what LLMs are good at.
Sounds promising. How do you find ideal customers? That's usually the hard part.
Fully agree, that’s how I see most of my less technical coworkers reason about using AI. “Is there a Claude skill for that?” is a question I hear multiple times a week. I see a lot of comments (incl 2 sibling comments)…
Unfortunately this seems quite plausible from today’s POV. As the old saying goes if you don’t want to be the product, you’ll have to pay for it. And I see only a silver of people being rich enough to afford and…
Working in selection, I can say it’s more nuanced than that. Any measurement can be used as long as it is relevant to the business and related to performance. For example, you’re fine to reject people based on height if…
A greatly written article! Really a masterclass of (1) getting the point across and (2) being emotionally engaging all the while not requiring me to have a PhD in pharmacology to understand it.
Seems interesting but testing myself only yields my results? How would I compare the result to a frontier model, that part seems to be missing? Also, the tests seem to be heavily skewed in favor of what LLMs are good at.
Sounds promising. How do you find ideal customers? That's usually the hard part.