This week’s cover represents Google Gemini’s prowess at Needle In A Haystack (NIAH) evaluation. This refers to an AI’s ability to hold large amounts of information in memory and successfully retrieve trivial details. Gemini can hold an entire film or 70 full-length novels. The cover shows a man dressed like Waldo from “Where’s Waldo” standing in a field, symbolizing the ‘needle in a haystack’. He’s thinking of Teddy’s phone number from the movie “Memento”, and Gemini recognizes the number as the same as Marla Singer’s from “Fight Club”, representing Gemini’s NIAH ability. Image created with MidJourney and Adobe Generative Fill.
Executive Summary
- Google Gemini’s Incredible Abilities: The top story this week is Google Gemini. Two things make it stand out: 1) a huge “context window” – another word for conversational memory. 2) Multimodal Needle In A Haystack capability- the ability to search any type of media for tiny details anywhere within the context window. Gemini is in its ‘feats of strength’ mode and people are sharing accounts of their amazement (see the “Top 36 Links” section).
- NVIDIA’s Robot Embodiment Project: The second top story is a new project at NVIDIA, called GEAR: Generalist Embodied Agent Research. Researcher Jim Fan is leading the team. He’s an important name to know. His TED Talk in 2023 is a must-watch video. “Generalist Embodied Agent Research” is a fancy way to say “AI robots”. Leading AI experts predict a proliferation of AI robots that will catch everyone off guard in the next 12-18 months.
- Google Image Controversy: At the end of the week, Gemini’s image creator ran into controversy when it had trouble handling race and diversity. It missed the cut off this week but will certainly be in the news next few weeks as it’s a hot topic.
- OpenAI’s Sora: Sora continues to drive amazing text-to-video. The examples below are even more incredible than last week’s. However a counterpoint this week is a reminder that “CGI” (computer generated imagery) has been around in film for a long time (see links section for a mind-blowing CGI example). As AI becomes ubiquitous, we need a more refined language.
Top 36 Links
These are the must-click links, in order, if you only have time for a few. Even if they look boring, click them! I did the work, so you don’t have to worry. All are 10/10 would recommend.
- Gemini Feats of Strength
- “Breaking down + understanding a long video I uploaded the entire NBA dunk contest from last night and asked which dunk had the highest score. Gemini 1.5 was incredibly able to find the specific perfect 50 dunk and details from just its long context video understanding!”
- “I fed an *entire* biology textbook into Gemini 1.5 Pro. 491,002 tokens. I asked it 3 extremely specific questions, and it got each answer 100% correct. 1M token context windows are a game changer.”
- “Mind officially blown: I recorded a screen capture of a task (looking for an apartment on Zillow). Gemini was able to generate Selenium code to replicate that task, and described everything I did step-by-step.”
- “Understanding the entire Interstellar movie transcript, and highlighting key moments. Gemini 1.5 was able to tell me the 3 most inspiring quotes from the transcript of Interstellar.”
- “Translating language into a language spoken by less than 2000 people. Gemini 1.5 was able to translate English to Saterlandic (spoken by less than 2000 people) following a full linguistic manual at inference time. Absolutely incredible.”
- “I recorded myself lifting weights. I fed the video into Gemini 1.5 Pro and asked it to write JSON for each exercise’s name, set count, rep count, weight, and to generate form critiques. Worked perfectly. Hook it up to a camera + TTS and you have an AI personal trainer. Wild.”
- “The killer app of Gemini Pro 1.5 is video”
- OpenAI Sora Videos Continue to Amaze
- “Sora can generate multiple videos side-by-side simultaneously. This is a single video sample from Sora. We didn’t stitch this together; Sora decided it wanted to have five different viewpoints all at once!”
- “pov footage of an ant navigating the inside of an ant nest”
- “macro shot of a leaf showing tiny trains moving through its veins”
- Actual CGI (remember that?) – Incredible Example – Must See
- “Forget physics. Wake me up when Sora (or any other AI model) can do this… This is almost indistinguishable from reality. Created using Blender, Unreal Engine, Maya, Substance 3D Painter, and Nuke, using 22 UDIMs at 4K resolution by the talented Petter Steen.”
- “We actually already have a term for it: computer-generated imagery (CGI). Most movies and shows you watch are partially or entirely generated. Remember those dinosaurs in Jurassic Park? Guess what? They are not real. (yeah, sorry to break that) But sometimes, CGI is harder to find. Look for David Fincher’s VFX breakdown of The Social Network, for example. The best CGI is the one you don’t notice. And society has been perfectly fine about it. Under that premise, then, the real concerns do not seem to be how to distinguish what is real from what is not, but what happens when everyone has the tools that a David Fincher movie budget has.”
- Teaching Calculus Using Celebrity Deep Fakes – File under things that would have seemed impossible 12 months ago
- “Gen-z is now using deepfakes to teach each other calculus” (and it’s pretty fun!)
- Kim and Taylor teach calculus
- Company Name to Know – Magic
- “In this morning’s AI Agenda: AI coding startup Magic has apparently made a breakthrough in AI reasoning, similar to OpenAI’s Q*. That could have been a major factor in their recent $100MM round.
- “Magic announced a $117M raise led by former Github CEO Nat Friedman. The company is building frontier-scale AI code models, seeking to build an ‘AI software engineer’ on the path towards AGI.”
- Reddit and Google are partnering up to train AI models. Last week, we found out Reddit signed a $60M deal granting access to its user content for AI model training to an unknown company. Today, we found out that it was Google.
- MidJourney Image News and Cool Prompts of the Week
- Big news: “Midjourney Video is coming with v7
- “New little improvements in the Midjourney Alpha You can now use any of your generations as a style reference with a single click They also added some new icons to make it easier to see what your image is being used for”
https://twitter.com/nickfloats/status/1759700220533731775 - Agreed: “working with style references in midjourney honestly changes everything you’re essentially mixing & blending colors, forms, textures, lighting, and ambiance through images and a tiny bit of text prompting and you actually have way more control, it’s kinda incredible”
https://twitter.com/nickfloats/status/1760132770443993546 - “Midjourney currently has 12 parameters that let you tune & control the aesthetics/style of your generations These are the ones I’ve been using the most:
- StableDiffusion/s Text Based Image Editing
- Must see video:
- Chips and Hardware
- NVIDIA: “NVIDIA blew past expectations with its Q4 earnings report, with a 265% year-over-year increase and massive data center revenue. The result? Up over a whopping 16%, pushing market cap passed Google and claiming position as the third largest stock in the world.”
- SoftBank: “SoftBank founder and billionaire Masayoshi Son is reportedly looking to raise $100B to launch ‘Project Izanagi’. The AI chip venture aims to compete with NVIDIA and push towards AGI. $30B is potentially from SoftBank and $70B from Middle Eastern backers.
- Groq (with a q) is on fire: “Wow, that’s a lot of tweets tonight! FAQs responses. • We’re faster because we designed our chip & systems • It’s an LPU, Language Processing Unit (not a GPU) • We use open-source models, but we don’t train them • We are increasing access capacity weekly, stay tuned.
- Augmented and Virtual Reality AR/VR
- This is an underreported big deal from Meta, especially if robots will ‘spawn’ from AR/VR. “This is the dataset you need to build an AI JARVIS. Aria Everyday Activities: multi-modal datasets from an ‘egocentric’ point of view i.e. AR glasses – 143 daily activity sequences – all indoor recordings by multiple wearers in 5 geographies
- The Incredibly Small World of Founders in the AI Space (what a photo)
- Jensen, Elon, Jim Fan, Altman, Ilya.
- “Some pics from when Jensen delivered the first Nvidia AI system to OpenAI”
- “The first time I met Jensen was also the first time I met Elon Musk. I was interning at OpenAI that day and witnessed the moment Jensen handed Elon the first DGX”
- ElevenLabs dubs the Sora Videos
- “Unmute. Sora now gets synthetic audio.”
- Gemini Controversial Image Generation Issues (surreal headlines of the week)
- “Google apologizes for ‘missing the mark’ after Gemini generated racially diverse Nazis”
- “We’re aware that Gemini is offering inaccuracies in some historical image generation depictions. Here’s our statement.
- “I am retracting my statements about the gemini art disaster. It is in fact a masterpiece of performance art, even if unintentional. True gain-of-function art. Art as a virus: unthinking, unintentional and contagious. offensive to all, comforting to none.”
- Adobe Creates 50-Person AI Video Team
- “Adobe has created a new 50-person AI research org called CAVA (Co-Creation for Audio, Video, & Animation). I can’t help but wonder if OpenAI’s Sora has been a wake up call for Adobe to formalize and accelerate their video and multimodal creation efforts?”
- Google Launches an Open Source Family of Models (slightly nerdy, but a first I think for Google in the open model arena)
- “Google just announced Gemma. Gemma is a family of lightweight and open models developed using Gemini models technology.”
- Test and Rate The Responses of Various LLMs
- ChatBot Arena – This is a great way to get a bit outside of the ChatGPT box and see what the open source models can do… easy and fun.
The Rest: AI News of The Week
Don’t let the volume overwhelm you. Have fun and skim them. The links are organized by topic, sorted from ‘coolest’ to ‘least cool’, and each topic is clearly defined with a headline. I’ve added a description and glossary of what the topics mean, beneath each label, in plain language. I do the work so you don’t have to! When you visit the pages, note that the links and descriptions are often pulled directly from tweets or articles, so it’s not always my voice. Pause when you see something that interests you. Reach out to me any time. I enjoy sharing and discussing these items.
Agency/Agents/Copilots News of the Week: Agency is when AI can do things for you (like Googling an actress name or fetching the latest weather forecast). An agent is one step further, when AI given autonomy to take action on your behalf (“Alexa, book a reservation for three at Peak in Hudson Yards for Friday night”). A co-pilot is an assistant (like spell check or autofill).
This weeks’s latest agent news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/agents-and-copilots-ai-news-week-ending-02-16-2024/
Amazon News of The Week: Individual company products will often by placed in the categories they match (image, audio, agents, robots, etc). Occasionally, I’ll dedicate space to a company’s news if it’s broad or a major product release.
This week’s latest Amazon AI news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/amazon-ai-news-week-ending-02-16-2024/
Apple News of the Week: Individual company products will often by placed in the categories they match (image, audio, agents, robots, etc). Occasionally, I’ll dedicate space to a company’s news if it’s broad or a major product release.
This weeks’ latest Apple AI news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/apple-ai-news-week-ending-02-16-2024-2/
Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) News of the Week: Artificial General Intelligence, in a nutshell, is when artificial intelligence is able to beat humans at everything (including embodying physical forms and completing physical tasks). It’s usually a thought catalyst for predictions, like when AGI will occur. 10 years? 25 years? 100? AGI is an event horizon that is tough to define, tough to imagine, and tough to predict. OpenAI defined AGI in its charter as “highly autonomous systems that outperform humans at most economically valuable work”. OpenAI has a section of its website dedicated to AGI. Google’s DeepMind published my favorite report on the five levels of artificial intelligence on the way to AGI (see also here).
This week’s latest Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) news:
Augmented and Virtual Reality (AR/VR) News of the Week: Augmented reality is when you see images or information on top of the real world. A car windshield with a heads-up display of the speed. Or glasses that have facial recognition and overlay the names of everyone in view. Virtual reality is when you are transported into another place, usually wearing goggles, but a flight simulator could also be considered virtual reality.
This weeks’s latest AR/VR news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/augmented-and-virtual-reality-ar-vr-news-week-ending-02-16-2024-2/
Autonomous Vehicles/Driverless Cars News of the Week: Driverless car news doesn’t always get its own category, because it’s so close to robot embodiment. I go with my gut each week around what to place in each category. My recommendation would be to follow Robotics/Embodiment also, as the two fields are converging.
This week’s autonomous vehicle news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/autonomous-vehicles-news-week-ending-02-16-2024/
AI Audio News of the Week: In this case, AI audio can mean a few things. The first is “generative audio” which refers to creating sounds with AI, much like ChatGPT writes words or MidJourney creates images. For example, asking for the “sound of waves crashing on the beach” would be text to sound. Another example would be an AI ‘watching’ a video and adding sound to it, like a foley artist would add footsteps or a creaking door to a movie scene. Lastly, AI audio can refer to microphones that only pick up certain speaker’s voices or headsets that cancel out all voices but your friends. This week’s latest AI audio news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/ai-audio-news-week-ending-02-16-2024-2/
Business/EnterpriseAI News of the Week: This broad category is for stories that impact corporations and large scale AI implementation. Enterprise refers to a type of AI that is often custom built for a business or leverage an API to connect secure data to an AI model.
This weeks’s latest enterprise AI news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/business-and-enterprise-ai-news-week-ending-02-16-2024-2/
Chips and Hardware AI News of the Week: Most of the chip news is NVIDA usually, yet more and more Meta, Google, and OpenAI are starting toward their own manufacturing. I have to make the call whether to put Meta, Google, and OpenAI’s chip news under this section or their company sections. Lately, I’m putting each company’s chips news into the company category, rather than the chips category. This is the rest of the chips headlines.
This weeks’s latest chips and hardware news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/chips-and-hardware-week-ending-02-16-2024-2/
Consumer Electronics AI News of the Week: This is a broad category meant to capture end user tools and products that incorporate artificial into their feature, from high-end grills to smartphones.
This weeks’s latest consumer AI news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/consumer-products-week-ending-02-16-2024/
Education AI News of the Week: There is a lot of buzz around the impact of AI in education. This section focuses both on the risks and rewards of how AI can impact learning. It’s broader than just K-12 and includes things like skills, trade, professional, and higher education. This is not about how to learn AI, it’s about AI’s impact on learning.
This weeks’s latest education news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/education-ai-news-week-ending-02-16-2024-2/
Ethics/Legal/Security AI News of the Week: This section focuses on the impact AI is having on ethics (deep fakes, war, trust, false information, plagiarism, job loss, income), legal (rights, laws, regulations), and security (hacking, phishing, national interests, safety). For huge news stories like the NY Times suing OpenAI, I usually put them under the main section or give them their own page.
This weeks’s latest AI ethics/legal/security news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/ethics-legal-security-ai-news-week-ending-02-16-2024-2/
Google AI News of the Week: Individual company products will often by placed in the categories they match (image, audio, agents, robots, etc). Occasionally, I’ll dedicate space to a company’s news if it’s broad
This weeks’s latest Google AI news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/google-ai-news-week-ending-02-16-2024-2/
Imagery News of the Week: AI imagery covers “generative AI” image tools. This usually text-to-image, where a user enters a prompt (“a polar bear walking through NYC”) and a tool like Dalle or MidJourney generates an image in the likeness of the description. This is different than AI vision, where an AI “looks at” an image and can derive context, details, and contents. AI vision is a subset of AI called multimodality. Imagery, in this case, is for image creation and modification/editing. Adobe Photoshop’s AI tools would fall into this category. I’ll also include things like automatic masking and object removal, even though that’s in between imagery and vision… but practically speaking it fits into editing.
This weeks’s latest AI image news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/ai-imagery-news-week-ending-02-16-2024-2/
International AI News of the Week: A lot of international news will get cross listed in the chips, security, or open-source categories, however it’s nice to have a separate category for worldwide AI news.
This week’s latest international AI news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/international-ai-news-china-france-india/
Locally Run AI Models News of the Week: This is a niche mostly for serious AI followers. It refers to AI that can be privately downloaded and run on a device without an internet connection. These have an array of powerful implications, from ethics of rogue users with untethered agents, to practical uses like Apple running a full AI on your phone, to corporate installations for security, to embodied robots with AI running in their virtual brain.
This weeks’s latest locally run AI news: Nothing new this week, but check out the category archives.
Meta AI News of the Week: This is a space dedicated for Meta specific AI advancements and news stories.
This weeks Meta AI news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/meta-ai-news-week-ending-02-16-2024-2/
Microsoft AI News of the Week: This is a space dedicated for Microsoft specific AI advancements and news stories.
This weeks Microsoft AI news: Nothing new this week specifically, but check out the category archives.
Multimodal AI News of the Week: This is a broad topic for an single AI model that demonstrates an ability to interact with more than one modality (imagery, video, audio, text). Often multimodal news will end up in one of these categories. I’m playing it by ear on a case by case basis. Please be patient with my organizational challenges.
This week’s multimodal AI news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/ai-multimodality-vision-news-week-ending-02-16-2024-2/
OpenAI: OpenAI is the leading force in the AI boom of 2023 and now 2024. This section focuses on news that is specific to OpenAI. This section will compete with all of the other sections (imagery, vision, ethics, etc) because OpenAI is so broad. I won’t be able to consistently pick when to put things under OpenAI or other sections, so bear with me.
This weeks’s latest OpenAI news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/openai-news-week-ending-02-23-2024/
Open Source Models: An open source AI model refers to a class of artificial intelligence models with public source code. They can be inspected, copied, installed, and customized on private computers. In contrast, a closed source model is proprietary and owned by a company that you pay to use (like PowerPoint or Photoshop). One of the most famous open source language models is a French model called Mistral. Its code is completely publicly available, and anyone can download it and customize it. On one hand, open source is a transparent and powerful way to democratize AI, but on the other hand, open source models circumvent the guard rails and copyright protections that private companies implement. Open source models are the wild west of artificial intelligence, but also the potential saving grace (depending on who you ask). It’s a bit like gun control debates but for computing power.
This weeks’s latest open source news:https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/open-source-ai-news-week-ending-02-16-2024-2/
Podcast/YouTube Clips of the Week: This is for more general interviews and explainer videos and podcasts that provide access to leadership, demos of new products, and walkthroughs and tutorials. Videos focused on specific topics will live in the topic category (i.e. images), but broader videos will live here.
This weeks’s latest podcasts and YouTube clips: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/ai-podcasts-youtube-op-eds-week-ending-02-23-2024/
Publishing AI News of the Week: These are stories about AI’s impact on the publishing industry. From copyright and crawling to the death of page views or even the end of browsers.
This weeks’s latest publishing AI news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/ai-publishing-news-week-ending-02-23-2024/
Robotics/Embodiment News of the Week: This is the most intense area of AI. Embodiment refers to putting an AI inside of a machine. It’s “embodying” the object and therefore giving a robot agency in the real world. An example would be using a large language model as an interface to a complex coding task. Just as you ask “Alexa, play Bad Blood by Taylor Swift on Spotify” using plain language, with embodiment you could ask a robot to “Go to the laundry basket and bring me all of the red shirts”. The language model in the robot would translate your request into the proper code to go get the red shirts. The robot was never trained on the task. Another type of embodiment would be training a robot using virtual reality simulations. Using an simulation, a robot could be trained on thousands of scenarios until the real world can be swapped out and the robot doesn’t “notice”. This section also includes factory automation and human prosthetics. There will be some overlap with other categories like autonomous vehicles. I first learned about embodiment from Alan Thompson. I highly recommend his video explainer: https://youtu.be/peLqYP9BAUg?si=2FzrvDlw-qaQFaCx.
This week’s latest robot and embodiment AI news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/robotics-and-embodiment-news-week-ending-02-23-2024/
Science/Medicine AI News of the Week: AI’s strength is learning patterns. This applies nicely to medical diagnosis and identifying trends. When combined with data and AI vision, this means AI is good at looking at x-rays. Language models are helping with patient interface, and robotics and augmented reality are advancing surgery. Powerful enterprise models like Google’s Alphafold can master protein folding. Other models can read ancient scrolls without opening them.
This weeks’s latest AI science and medicine news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/ai-science-and-medicine-news-week-ending-02-23-2024/
AI Video News of the Week: AI video in this case refers to generative video. Much like imagery meant generative imagery. This usually text-to-video, where a user enters a prompt (“a wizard walking out of a flaming building”) and a tool like Pika or Runway generates an video in the likeness of the description. It also covers animation of still images, where an image is given motion (like a photo of a waterfall appearing to have flowing water). As with images, this is different than AI vision, where an AI “looks at” an image or video and can derive context, details, and contents. Video, in this case, is video creation and modification/editing.
This weeks’s latest AI video news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/ai-video-news-week-ending-02-23-2024/
X/Twitter/Grok: Grok is one of several AI’s developed by X, and it’s a bit blended in with Telsa and other Elon Musk technology. Not every week will have a Grok section, but like Meta, Google, Apple, and OpenAI, X will be in the news enough to have its own section.
This week’s latest X news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/twitter-x-grok-week-ending-02-23-2024/
Technical and AI Developer News of the Week: Everything that is too technical for general consumption goes here. These are stories I think are important, but might be inaccessible and confusing. It’s also a space for developer news and deep dives into how AI works, under the hood.
This weeks technical and dev AI news: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/03/02/ai-tech-and-development-news-week-ending-02-23-2024/
Credits/Sources
Most of these links come from just a few incredible sources. Please follow them:
- Robert Scoble: https://x.com/Scobleizer
- Ethan Mollick: https://www.linkedin.com/in/emollick/
- David Armano: https://www.linkedin.com/in/darmano/
- Alan Thompson: https://lifearchitect.ai/
- Theoretically Media: https://www.youtube.com/@TheoreticallyMedia
- The Rundown: https://www.therundown.ai/
- Bilawal Sidhu: https://twitter.com/bilawalsidhu/
- TLDR: https://tldr.tech/ai
- Jeremiah Owyang: https://twitter.com/jowyang
- Wes Roth: https://www.youtube.com/@WesRoth
Previous Issues
- AI News: Week Ending 02/16/2024: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/02/27/ai-news-20-week-ending-02-16-2024-with-executive-summary-and-top-39-links/
- AI News: Week Ending 02/09/2024: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/02/25/ai-news-19-week-ending-02-09-2024-with-executive-summary-and-top-18-links/
- AI News: Week Ending 02/02/2024: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/02/17/ai-news-18-week-ending-02-02-2024-with-executive-summary-and-top-18-stories/
- AI News: Week Ending 01/26/2024: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/02/06/ai-news-17-week-ending-01-26-2024-with-executive-summary-and-top-12-stories/
- AI News: Week Ending 01/19/2024: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/02/04/ai-news-16-week-ending-01-19-2024-with-executive-summary-and-top-16-stories/
- AI News: Week Ending 01/12/2024: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/01/15/ai-news-15-week-ending-01-012-2024-with-executive-summary-and-top-13-stories/
- AI News: Week Ending 01/05/2024: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/01/14/ai-news-14-week-ending-01-05-2023-with-executive-summary-and-top-16-stories/
- AI News: Week Ending 12/29/2023: https://ethanbholland.com/2024/01/07/ai-news-12-week-ending-12-29-2023-with-executive-summary-and-top-9-stories/
- AI News: Week Ending 12/22/2023: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ai-news-week-ending-12222023-executive-summary-top-links-holland-frx4e
- AI News: Week Ending 12/15/2023: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ai-news-week-ending-12152023-ethan-holland-elmee
- AI News: Week Ending 12/08/2023: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ai-news-week-ending-12082023-ethan-holland-zabve
- AI News: Week Ending 12/01/2023: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ai-news-week-ending-12012023-ethan-holland-rglve
- AI News: Week Ending 11/24/2023: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ai-news-week-ending-11242023-ethan-holland-jqvre
- AI News: Week Ending 11/17/2023: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ai-news-week-ending-11172023-ethan-holland-ad6le
- AI News: Week Ending 11/10/2023: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ai-news-week-ending-11102023-executive-summary-top-three-holland-yjdef/
- AI News: Week Ending 11/03/2023: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/ethanholland_aiebh-ai-generativeai-activity-7131396231678844928-3U8M
- AI News: Week Ending 10/27/2023: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/ethanholland_aiebh-ai-generativeai-activity-7127139342321356800-uBPD
- AI News: Week Ending 10/20/2023: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ai-news-week-ending-10202023-ethan-holland-eocpe
- AI News: Week Ending 10/13/2023: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ai-news-week-ending-10132023-executive-summary-ethan-holland-nq9bf
- AI News: Week Ending 10/6/2023: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ai-news-week-ending-1062023-ethan-holland-b6uhe





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