Image created with gemini-3.1-flash-image-preview with claude-sonnet-4-5. Image prompt: Using the provided reference image, preserve the deep midnight navy car hood, shallow depth-of-field sky background, chrome pedestal base, dramatic upward camera angle, and automotive advertisement lighting exactly as shown. Replace only the Mercedes star with a single chrome hood ornament depicting an open book standing upright with pages mid-turn, rendered in the same polished metal finish at realistic ornament scale on the identical pedestal. Add bold white sans-serif text reading EDUCATION across the upper portion of the image in clean display typography.
Never been a better time to study the humanities: 1) LLMs are trained on the cultural history of all humans, knowing that helps you use them 2) The humanities gives us context in this odd moment in history 3) Books & stuff are good Wrote this 3 years ago:
https://x.com/emollick/status/2033692979844485304
AI really can help education: Randomized controlled experiment on high school students found a GPT-4o powered tutor that personalized problems for students raised final test scores by .15 SD, “”equivalent to as much as six to nine months of additional schooling by some estimates””
https://x.com/emollick/status/2033773791688433708
An AI consultant with no biology training used ChatGPT and AlphaFold to create a personalized mRNA cancer vaccine for his rescue dog. Tumor shrunk by half. UNSW structural biologist Dr. Kate Michie: “It’s exciting to me that someone who’s not a scientist has been able to do
https://x.com/TheRundownAI/status/2032843584869708105
this is actually insane > be tech guy in australia > adopt cancer riddled rescue dog, months to live > not_going_to_give_you_up.mp4 > pay $3,000 to sequence her tumor DNA > feed it to ChatGPT and AlphaFold > zero background in biology > identify mutated proteins, match them to
https://x.com/IterIntellectus/status/2032858964858228817
There are many great AI researchers at universities, but they pay a VERY steep price to be able to stay in academia and publish openly: “The top 1% of publishing industry scientists now earn $1.5 million more annually than comparable academics, a fivefold increase since 2001”
https://x.com/emollick/status/2033524467943489783




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