Comment by skybrian

2 years ago

It's a great metaphor and one we should use more. But there's a place for blurred photos: thumbnails.

On Hacker News we often complain about headlines because that's all we see at first. But I've been using Kagi's summarizer [1] and I think it's a great tool for getting the gist of certain things, like if you want to know what a YouTube video is about without watching it. (Google Translate is useful for similar reasons.)

Perhaps someday, Hacker News will have an AI-generated summary of the article at the top of each comment page?

Similarly, ChatGPT excels at fast answers for questions like "What is a X", where you just want a quick definition. It's probably in Wikipedia somewhere, but you don't have to read as much. And it might be wrong, but probably not as wrong as the definition you'd infer from context if you didn't look it up.

We probably would be better off if these things were called "artificial memory" rather than "artificial intelligence." It's an associative memory that often works like human memory in how frequently it confabulates. When you care, you write things down and look things up.

[1] https://labs.kagi.com/ai/sum

Thank you for the Kagi mention. I’m using Neeva right now but I didn’t know there were (I didn’t bother looking for) other alternatives.

Thumbnails, image matching, low-bandwidth summaries... There are plenty of uses for smoothed images. Also, there are many interesting transformations you can use on computer vision and image processing that start with a blur.

If I try to map the first three into text, there are automatic TL.DR. like you said, document grouping, and search into entire document stores (as in do documents in this store deal with this idea?). On "artificial document creation", there is that highly valuable service of answering stuff like "hey, that thing with sticks that rotate and pull a vehicle around, what is its name again?"