Likely inspired by the many people on X who have for the past few days used ChatGPT to render famous photos and memes in the style of Hayao Miyazaki’s Studio Ghibli films, PJ Ace said he spent $250 in Kling credits and in 9 hours had re-created the Fellowship of the Rings trailer.
AI is dramatically changing the creative landscape.
Traditional phone and reservation services are ripe for being replaced by AI bots. We each could soon should have a small army of bots that do all kinds of menial tasks for us. In fact, some are even predicting that AI agents may soon surpass people as primary application users. Who wouldn’t like to tell their phone to find them the cheapest flight to Cancun in 2 weeks and have it do all the searching?
To speed up the increasing bot-to-bot interaction and reduce delay and compute required to translate to and from speech, why not let the bots use a faster, less error-prone communication method?
A great video for April Fools day! Maybe you’ve seen the Orangutan card trick in which the magician Matt G seems to push a card through a piece of glass and the primate grabs and plays with the card. It took the internet briefly by storm and had many scratching their heads.
In his videos, he walks through not only how it’s done, but how you can go about figuring it out. I especially like this teaching component so you’re not fooled by the latest TikTok or viral video. As the internet becomes more and more AI generated and bot ridden, learning just how easily you can be fooled is more important than ever. Or, as science tells us, maybe we should all be stepping away from social media if we want to be happier.
Bonus points for him doing a double-pane passthrough at the end to show that even trickier versions can be done even cleaner.
Filmmaker and avid cyclist Quek Shio wowed the internet in 2023 when he shared his bike-building process in a smoothly edited video. Now he’s back with a new bicycle and a new video. Watch him conjure, duplicate, and put together parts out of thin air.
Today, somewhere around 4 in 10 recent college graduates find themselves employed in roles that don’t need their degree. They just can’t find jobs relevant to what they studied, so they settle for something lesser. This is the definition of underemployment, and it’s a growing problem.
Many also wonder if college is still a good choice for their child. The answer is a big maybe. College is not the best time or place to figure out your career direction. It’s the most expensive time of life and unfortunately, too many programs aren’t yet aligned with real-world workforce needs.
But if you’ve done the career exploration and have a clear picture of 1.) the lifestyle you want to live and 2.) the career that best intersects with that lifestyle and your talents, interests and abilities, and if college is a necessary step to reach that destination, then go.
Degrees that don’t hire well:
Degrees with the lowest underemployment:
Criminal justice: 71.5% Performing arts: 65.9% Art history: 62.3% Leisure and hospitality: 57.6% Liberal arts: 56.7% Animal and plant sciences: 56.3% Fine arts: 55.5% Miscellaneous technologies: 54.8% Business management: 53.6% History: 53.5%