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This Blog Now Powered By A.I. Levine

By: cogdog

Google Docs will have it, Microsoft is brewing it, PhotoShop is doing it, so is zoomโ€ฆitโ€™s high time that the advanced technology of CogDogBlog hop on the artificial intelligence inevitable train.

As demonstrated this week at the Reclaim Open 2023 conference, behold the new generation of blogging powered by AI Levine:

This is all the mad creativity of Michael Branson Smith, who along with Jim Groom (he has a blog, right?) contacted me a few months ago with a request for a short video he could us to train some AI that would generate some manifestation of me as a speaker at the conference.

How could I refuse? Michael is one of he most creative and gracious people I have gotten to know in this ed tech game, initially through DS106, but hey we have spent time together hanging out at his home in Brooklyn.

Michael shared a few prototypes, all of them definitely weird with artifacts, but still sounding like me. Each time he asked if I was okay with it, I said I trust you completely, MBS, do as you see interesting.

I did not travel to Reclaim, but enjoyed the online perch for the conference (I have to say that the Reclaim Hosting set up for live streams is one of the best I have seen. Live streams are viewed adjacent to a Discord chat, with its TV Guide like directory guide at the top.

Michael shared some details of his intent to learn something about AI by doing it himself (DS106 spirit showing). I am forgetting the tools used (itโ€™s in the video and hopefully a future MBS blog post). The original video I sent did not perform well, so MIchael relied on one from the YouTube I recorded in 2019 as an intro to students at a Coventry University class I was doing something with. Meet AI Levineโ€™s puppet:

Michael did say generating the AI audio was the bigger challenge- i believe he used ElevenLabs for text to speech. AI Levineโ€™s blabbering was based on a ChaGPT query to talk about SPLOTs derived from 4 blog URLs MIchael gave it to chew on. The โ€œhallucinatingโ€ is readily apparent in the history portion but the gist of it is maybe palpable.

As was obvious to most in the room, the video generated was weirdest with the mouth, and Michael ended up blurring AI Levine a bit in post editing.

In emails the day or two before, Jim Groom suggested some kind of irate outburst from me in chat where they could then bring me in to the room (via a whereby.com link). That would be fun, and of course, anyone ought to get bent out of shape by being deep faked. Thatโ€™s too easy.

My play was then to act dismissive, to assert that I am actually a supreme AI construct:

For a long time I have been โ€œtrainingโ€ myself by reading the entire internet. Everything I have made, written, created was generated from a complex process applied to this data. SPLOTs could only have been generated this way.

(no idea if this is what I actually said)

All in all it was quite enjoyable, as was seeing on the live stream and the whereby video much different views. All surreal.

Thanks Michael for creating this fallible facsimile in every AI sense of hallucinatory mockery and thanks Reclaim Hosting for putting this on the program.

For me, this again, puts on the table some impressive technical feats to produce, well the equivalent of flavorless mind porridge. Generative content stays within the guardrails of statistic probability yielding an appearance of pseudo meaning. Downtown Dullsville.

What Iโ€™ve not seen AI do is to make meaning and connections between the unlikely related. For example, in my regular training on internet content (aka reading blogs), my own neural pathways ran off in different directions in Martin Wellerโ€™s fab post Yankee Shed Foxtrot where he weaves also different, seemingly unrelated topics- a book on โ€œshedworkingโ€ and a song by Wilco.

Reading this as a human means I do not regurgitate sentences based on some vectors of word probability. For me and my [Un]Artificial [questionable] Intelligence, a series of other un stochastic connections. My comment on Martinโ€™s blog was one of those that really should have been a post hereโ€ฆ. so I will steal my ow words:

What you demonstrate in action here, oh ye faithful blogger, is something AI canโ€™t- make connections between ideas and things that are statistically out of range. Yes, we have neural networks in our grey matter, but the computerized ones that borrow the name cannot (well Stephen will assert its eventually possible) to connect this way.

What foir me your post does is trigger other connections. The idea of โ€œshedworkingโ€ (the name new but the idea resonates) for some reason reminds me of a book Scott Leslie recommended (see how connections, work, I can remember it was on a camping trip where we canoed to an island in BC) a book called โ€œShop Class as Soulcraftโ€ย http://www.matthewbcrawford.com/new-page-1-1-2ย that honors the value of work we do with our hands, it need not be mechanical, or done in a shed, but is a testimonial to the ideal of craftspersonship and what it does for us (I can extend it to creating web pages by hand).

As far as an academic metaphor (you are cornering the market!) I love the idea of conceptually makeing space and time for crafting. And yes, institutions are not providing this per se, but there is a two way play here- us as individuals have some responsibility for also not making the time and place ourselves for doing this. People who design their shedworking places are not just given them by an organizational entity, they take it on themselves. We as individuals have a stake in this.

And then for the music metaphor, I dont know if you are into the Song Exploder podcastย https://songexploder.net/ย Itโ€™s a brilliant concept where musicians break down a finished song into its origin story, how the tracks came together, layer by layer. Itโ€™s a fabulous metaphor (to me) of what we do little of in our work (outside thr last ferw bloggers standing) of not just pumping their finished work, but the craft of how it was made, how it emerged, if you will from their audio workshed.

I wanted to launch an idea like โ€œCourse Exploderโ€ where educators could break down a lesson or a OER or course design in the same way.

What I enjoy about Sound Exploder is that I get these stories for songs and genres I never listen to (sort of like how university requirements had me take courses I would have never chosen on my own interests). I was just listening to the episode where Seal talked about the evolution of the mega pop hit โ€œKissed by the Windโ€ (heard the song plenty but cant say its in my listening queue). Itโ€™s rivetting to hear him talk about its origin, but there is a bit in the opening where he talks bout his start before being a mega star:

โ€œI was living in a squat. I didnโ€™t have any money and I was just basically getting my act together, trying to figure out who I was musically. And โ€œKiss From A Roseโ€ came out of that period, when you sort of do things not for any other purpose than because thatโ€™s whatโ€™s coming out of you. I had no experience in the studio, in a proper recording studio, at that point.โ€

Itโ€™s that lineโ€“ โ€œwhen you sort of do things not for any other purpose than because thatโ€™s whatโ€™s coming out of youโ€ that connects in my head back to Shopcraft and sheds and why we even bother trying to do stuff.

My comment on Martin Wellerโ€™s Yankee Shed Foxtrot blog post

I may be on the far end of the bell curve of what people want from the world these days, but I crave more the intelligence that makes meaning from dissimilar ideas, not just spitting back the statistically relevant blandchastic stuff.

You heard it all from me, the always A.I. Levine.


Featured Image: Combination of one frame from the Reclaim Open 2023 presentation The SPLOT Revolution will be Artificial with a conference logo and a SPLOT logo, call the whole thing CC BY.

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