AI Dungeon Run | Andrew Ng's AI For Everyone – Chapters 3 & 4
Chapter 3 covers building AI inside companies, and Chapter 4 tackles AI and society. The takeaway: AI is a powerful tool with real limits — treat it accordingly.
Chapter 3 covers building AI inside companies, and Chapter 4 tackles AI and society. The takeaway: AI is a powerful tool with real limits — treat it accordingly.
Chapter 2 dives into how AI projects actually get built, with lots of real-world examples. The data matters more than you'd think — and AI automates tasks, not jobs.
Embarrassingly, during my PhD I had access to Professor Hsieh Shu-kai's incredible AI resources and courses — and I never took advantage of them. Now AI is unavoidable, and I'm finally catching up.
Reading notes for The Design of Everyday Things, Chapter 2. Starting from learned helplessness, this chapter digs into the relationship between human psychology, emotion, and action.
A review and reading notes for The Design of Everyday Things by Donald A. Norman — specifically the intro and Chapter 1. Using vivid, relatable examples, Norman lays out the fundamentals of design and cognitive science. Highly recommended for anyone interested in cognitive science, UX, or anyone whose work involves communicating with an audience.
A review of Po-Jang Hsieh's book on brain science and everyday cognitive tricks — covering marketing traps, social biases, workplace psychology, and knowledge myths. If you're into neuroscience or psychology, this is one of the best popular science reads out there.
A review of Gory Details: Adventures from the Dark Side of Science by Erika Engelhaupt. Engelhaupt is basically the queen of weird knowledge — her book is packed with disgusting, fascinating, and genuinely well-researched science. Perfect for fans of strange articles, forensics, and dark curiosities.
A review of No Rules Rules. The book explains how Netflix's seemingly hands-off approach actually succeeds through high talent density, radical candor, and minimal controls.
A review of Zack Davisson's Yūrei: The Japanese Ghost. Davisson explores how yūrei — Japanese ghosts — are deeply intertwined with Japan's history, culture, art history, and politics, elevating ghost lore far beyond mere spooky tales.