Actually using technology to create art is something that’s often harder for us to appreciate, though, and looking at technological art from the artist’s side can be pretty instructive.Ĭory Collins is an animator and artist with a long history of not only putting tech to work to create art, but also using it as the subject of his pieces. We often talk in terms of the aesthetics of a particular hack, or the elegance of one solution over another, and we can marvel at the craftsmanship involved in everything from a well-designed PCB to a particularly clever reverse-engineering effort. Join us on Wednesday, June 16 at noon Pacific for the Art with Technology Hack Chat with Cory Collins!Īs hackers, we naturally see the beauty of technology. It’s also reported that it made a lot of simple math mistakes, too, so maybe a Wharton MBA isn’t that much of a big deal after all.Ĭontinue reading “Hackaday Links: January 29, 2023” → Posted in Hackaday Columns, Hackaday links, Slider Tagged Academic, ChatGPT, CHEATING, comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF), crypto mining, diatomic carbon, Empire State Building, exam, fish, hackaday links, machine vision, MBA, motion capture, noise, pokemon, test The exam presented to ChatGPT was just a final exam for one course, Operations Management, so it’s not like it aced everything an MBA is expected to know, and it took a lot of hints from a human helper to get it that far. But before you worry about a world in which our best and brightest business leaders are replaced with soulless automatons, relax. So the fact that ChatGPT could pass the exam is significant. But now it looks like AI has set its sights set on the white-collar world, with the announcement that ChatGPT has managed a passing grade on a Wharton MBA exam.įor those not in the know, the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business is in the major league of business schools earning a Master’s in Business Administration from that august institution is no mean feat, and is likely to put the budding executive on a ballistic career trajectory. We’ve been told for ages that “the robots are coming for our jobs!” It’s true that we’ve seen robots capable of everything from burger flipping to bricklaying being demonstrated, and that’s certainly alarming for anyone employed in such trades.
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