Apple Intelligence - August 28, 2025
Lecture summarized by Notion AI
Overview
The meeting was a demonstration of Apple Intelligence features on Mac computers, showcasing how AI is integrated into various Apple applications. The presenter walked through several key features and explained the requirements for using Apple Intelligence, including having macOS Sequoia and a Mac with at least an M1 chip.
System Requirements
- macOS Sequoia (newest operating system)
- Mac with an M1 chip or newer (Apple silicon)
- ChatGPT integration can be enabled without requiring an account
Email Features
- Apple Intelligence summarizes emails in the inbox without needing to open them
- Example: A 20-message family thread about travel vaccinations was condensed to "about travel vaccinations and insurance that should be considered"
- When replying to emails, AI suggests two response options:
- A positive/agreeable response
- An alternative response (disagreement or qualification)
- The system reads email content and generates contextually appropriate responses
Photo Editing
- New "Cleanup" tool in photo editing identifies objects that might be unwanted
- Demonstrated removing people from the background of photos with a single click
- System can detect and remove multiple elements from photos (people, cars, trash)
- Discussion about how this technology will change photography expectations
Notes and Text Generation
- Apple Notes can use AI to rewrite or improve rough drafts
- Demonstrated converting rough travel notes into a properly formatted email
- Can generate summaries, lists, and key points from existing text
- Integration with ChatGPT allows for more complex content generation
Additional Features
- Calendar integration with emails (creating calendar events from email content)
- Tips application provides tutorials on various Apple Intelligence features
- Meeting transcription capabilities (being used during the demonstration itself)
Comparison with Other AI Systems
- Microsoft products use their own AI system (powered by OpenAI/ChatGPT)
- Google's implementation was noted as being more integrated with search results
- Different applications may produce different quality results even when using the same underlying AI engine
Action Items
- [ ] Participants can explore Apple Intelligence features on their own devices if they have compatible hardware and software
- [ ] Use the Tips application to learn more about specific Apple Intelligence features by searching for "Apple Intelligence" in Tips
Notes
Transcript
It's recording, right? You can see that it's listening to my voice, what I'm saying. It's picking that up. If you're in a big, big room with a lot of people, I don't know how well it will work. I haven't tried it yet. But last week, as I moved around, it was fine. So yeah, you can test it on your own. So I'm just gonna leave it and we'll see what comes out of it.
Good.
Again, it's not taking real-time dictation. It's not transcribing exactly what I'm saying as I'm saying it. It's actually listening, keeping all of that, holding it until I push stop. It will then kind of digest it all and then spit out the summary.
You know, that's a very good question. I would assume because it did listen to what I have been saying, it has a recording. So I'm pretty sure, I'm not sure actually, but it might somewhere I might be able to kind of look or listen to the recording of the meeting or the transcription to clarify something if something's missing or whatever.
Or if I need to.
Yeah, Zoom has recordings, right.
Right, right. OK, so let's dive into what I was going to talk to you about. So again, I don't have my phone, but we're going to use the computer for. Apple's AI. So of course we know up here on the very top corner used to be Siri, right? And on the newer versions of
The Apple operating system, and I think this is only in Sequoia. Okay, so you do have to have the newest operating system. I don't know what version of a computer you need or if it really makes a difference.
Instead of saying, I don't know, why don't I look it up?
So I'm going to say, what do I need on my Mac to use Apple Intelligence, right?
And again, this is Google, right? It does give me the first link, which is the traditional way, and I can click on it and I could read through it, but why read through it when AI read through it already for me? So it does say that I need to have Sequoia, which I did mention. And it also says that I need to have a Mac with an M1 chip.
The M1 chip are the Apple chips. So remember before on the older iMacs and older Apple computers, Intel was making the chips and then Apple decided at one point then to switch it back and then they said we're going to make our own chips. And that's the first version, which is the M1. I think they're on the M3 now, right? So as long as your computer has one of the M chips in it, you can run Apple Intelligence on your computer.
Good question. How do you find out if it does? That one I remember. Go to Apple menu on the top and then go back to about this Mac. And then you'll see here, the chip, and then it'll tell you which Mac operating system you're using. So, Siri is the interface that Apple created where we can talk to our computer and it gives us a response, right? So if I were to click up here on the top...
It says I can either type what I want to Siri, or I can talk to it. If I click talk, I could just... Actually, I'm not going to click talk because I don't know if it's going to affect the microphone. Because the transcribing is happening. So I'm just going to type, tell me more about...
What to do in Rome? I don't know. Someone's going to Rome, so I just thought of that. Tell me what to do in Rome, right? And I push return. So traditionally, what happens?
It gives you kind of, right, search results, right, like Google. Okay, I won't. Jeez, thanks.
Oh.
OK. So what it's forcing me to do is it wants me to enable the chat GPT, which is what I wanted to show you how to do anyway. But let me just tell you. If I type in Siri. Traditionally, a question, it kind of, if it can't give me a response, like if I ask it the time, it can tell me the time. If I give it the weather, it can tell me the weather, those types of things. If I ask it something more detailed, it will just give me a list of different websites I could visit to find that response, kind of like a Google search.
But, what we're going to do is we're going to turn on, in Apple Intelligence, we have to turn on the interaction with ChatGPT. We have to enable it. So if I go into my settings in Apple Intelligence, down on the very bottom. There's ChatGPT here, okay. So if I click ChatGPT, I have the option up here on the top to set it up.
I don't have to have a ChatGPT account to make this work. If I do have an account, though, it will track my history. And it will keep it in my chat GPT database of information, but it's not required. So...
Great. Hold on.
Oh, I hate it when this happens. So what has happened now is the screen has come up, but my buttons are hidden down on the bottom. See that? So I can't click it. So this is why sometimes I suggest to those that have a similar problem to move their dock.
Instead of being on the bottom where it covers stuff to move it to the...
So now it's on the side. So let me go back to my Apple Intelligence. So now, let's try it again. Go to Chats GPT, click on it. I'm going to go to Setup, and there's my button, Next. That was covered before. So I can click Now, Next. Or if I don't want it, I can choose Not Now.
But Apple's become really good about walking you through the steps and explaining why would you want to do this and what will happen. So I'm going to go to next. It's going to ask if I have an account, so if I have an account I would choose this option, if I don't I just enable it.
So now that it's enabled, let me try Apple Intelligence again.
So I'm asking, tell me what to do in Rome.
And it gives me a whole entire summary.
Right. So instead of it again just giving me like a website of maybe tour guides or packages that I can get right. It gives me a whole entire summary. And if I click on it, it might give me the resources of where it got the information. OK.
And it becomes more natural, is the point, and the reason why Apple's integrated in with Apple Intelligence is Chat GPT Tool. Right, so I can maybe talk to it more, ask it questions. It will interact with me, that kind of thing. Okay, and again, I'm not going to use it because I'm recording our meeting. It might override that recording.
Questions?
No, it's pretty easy, right? If you want to find out more about what Apple intelligence can do on your computer, right, on your Sequoia
I don't know if you've ever seen this, but when you get a new operating system or you get a new computer this little light bulb pops up and it pops up sometimes on your phone too. It's an icon from Apple. And TIPS, in some ways, is kind of a user manual. So if I look for Apple Intelligence and TIPS.
It comes up with a whole entire, well, in this case, it's a presentation, right?
I'm going to show you these in a second. In this case, you can make a memory, which is, if you type in what you're looking for, it takes pictures throughout your whole entire photo gallery and creates a memory book based on whatever you typed in. OK? This one here, and we'll do this, too. If you like emojis, this is the one where, if you're tired of all the emojis it gives you and you want to create your own emoji, or not create your own emoji, but you want an emoji that matches what you're trying to say better, this is the one that you're going to use.
And this is the one that you're going to use. You can tell AI to make it for you, OK? Well, I'll show you. I know you're like, this is ridiculous. But if you ever use the emoji, we're kind of getting tired of the thumbs up and the smiling face, you know? Let's come up with something new, right?
OK?
This one is the cleaning up of the photo. I showed you this last week in Google Photos. This is the Apple Intelligence part that you can do on the new iPhones with Apple Intelligence and of course on a Mac. And I'll show you an example of that in a second. Catch up with notifications. This is kind of like the little icon on the top left I talked to you about. I'm going to show you an email in a second.
That actually will kind of create the email for me. And it's weird. Not that I would use it, but it's weird because it actually reads my email. And will formulate a response, but will give me a choice depending on which way I want to respond. So it will give me the agreeable response to the email or the maybe not, let's do this instead response.
Really weird. OK. And then we could do summarize with the text and I'll show you that in a second where it's kind of like where it transcribes this meeting. Or the session and puts it into a summary. So if I have a whole bunch of content, maybe I have just been writing like thoughts, you know, everyday journal. But I want to take that everyday journal and make it into a story.
It might be able to do that for you. Okay? Weird, huh? Yeah. We're not going to... There's a lot more, right? And it keeps going. summarizing audio transcriptions, right? All this. So this is all in something called TIPS, okay? And you can look up for it and look at it yourself.
tips is in your computer just go to the little icon on the top the search and just type in tips you'll find it and
Here's the user guides. So if I want a user guide, I can find the user guide for Apple Intelligence somewhere. I don't know where it is. You just gotta... I don't know.
If you can't find it, use the search, right?
Not as advanced. Not yet. I think Microsoft is working on it. That's why they're going to come up with a new version soon.
If I click on one of those headings, you can see on the left is the list of table of contents and tips, and then the main heading here, which is what I was looking for, is Apple Intelligence. And you can read through it and you can read each of the different items that were introduced in more detail to see how you can actually use it.
So, let me show you. What's the first one I'll show you? I'll show you the email one first. Oh my gosh, I can't see my icons. They're too small. OK. So here's an email.
And I don't know if you can see it. Is it hard to see? Probably. Yeah. Let me just... I'll read it to you. Apple Intelligence is done with Macintosh Mail is it summarizes emails so you don't have to open it to understand what the email is about. So, for example, this one here with the blue dot, which is my communication with the family, the newest email, and this is 20 messages that are going back and forth between the family.
It summarizes the most recent message that was received, and it says this is about travel vaccinations and insurance that should be considered. So the most recent response was somebody saying that, you know, there's a... possible outbreak right now happening in a certain area. We should be careful, make sure we get vaccinated. And then they're saying we should also think about getting insurance. So it read all of that, summarized it and put it in here.
So that I can just kind of look at it briefly to see, oh, this is something I want to look at now or I can look at it later. This one here, another conversation going back and forth between a school. They're saying, and they summarized it, it just says, the roster's requested once finalized. If I open it, you can see, that's awesome. Once the roster's finalized, would you please send it to me?
But they took that, condensed it, and made it into six words so I didn't have to open this to read it. I could just see what the summary was. And that's what the Apple Intelligence is doing. It's looking through my emails, which is kind of spooky. I know. A lot of you are saying, isn't that intrusive?
Yeah. And you can turn it off. Don't worry. Anytime you don't want any of these things, you go into settings. The option to turn off the intelligence is there and you just turn it off and... It should stop. But it doesn't mean that it's still not reading your emails. So there's a lot of these kind of summaries now.
Now for emails, I'm going to show you a response. So for example.
This one here, asking about the student roster. If I reply to this email,
And I noticed, I don't know if you can see it, but it says two things. This little thing popped up where my little cursor is. The first one says, we'll send it. The second one says, can't send it. Remember I told you it gives me two paths on the road of how I would respond.
So if I can't send it, I want to click that, and it will formulate a response for me. Unfortunately, I can't send the roster yet, as it hasn't been finalized. I'll send it to you as soon as I can.
Pretty normal, right? I'll try the other one. I don't know if it'll come up. We'll send it.
I'll send you the finalized roster once it's ready.
Again, it's weird because it's reading the email and it's related to the content of the original email. I'm not prompting it like what I showed you before where I usually will say create an email that talks about this and it will generate an email. This one actually just reads it.
And gives me a response related to what was there. So another one, say we'll do the travel one about the vaccines.
And I'm going to reply. And then it will... let's see if it gives me a response.
So when it waits, it's actually thinking. It's reading through this email. So the two here, the first one says, Thanks for the advice. Second one is, I'll consider it.
Interesting, huh?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's just asking which way am I going? What do I want to say? Right? Okay. So am I for it or against it? Right? Because it's usually one or the other. And I'll say, I'll consider it. So it says here, thanks for the suggestion, Auntie or Katie. I'll consider it. The other one, if I went the other way.
Thanks for the advice. Thanks for the advice. I'll look into the vaccinations and insurance really quick, really fast. And trust me, some of the emails that you're sending back and forth between people... A lot of them are going to be these types of responses because you could see it's much faster. Right? Okay. If you're getting stuff from offices or corporate or work.
A lot of those responses are definitely going to be AI generated and you can see little things usually within the content that you're like, this sounds like a robot, you know, yeah. Here's a more detailed one. This is one between myself and one of my teachers. She made this whole entire class roster with the kids. It was a really great idea, but she's one of our new teachers. It's a little bit too much.
And she has all this information, and if I don't want to read through it, but I want to reply back to her, again, AI is waiting to give me a response because it's reading that email. It's longer than the other ones. In a moment, when it's ready, it will show me my two options there.
It has to do a lot more thinking.
So, first one is, sounds good. Second one is, I disagree. Right? But, if I choose I disagree...
Oh, it's an error. Look at that. Unable to generate content. Let's try it again.
I disagree.
I wonder if I used it too much already. I'm overloading it. Well, here. Sounds good. They don't want me to disagree. Sounds good. I agree that dividing the children into two groups works best. Thanks for the detailed explanation. So it read through this. It knew she wanted to create two different groups. And it, again, tailored my response based on the content from the video.
the original email.
Interesting.
Yeah, I don't know why. I'm not going to investigate. So that's one example of the AI in a Mac. And it's doing that on your phone. If you have Apple Intelligence on your iPhone. If you look at your emails, when you first open your email and you reply to something, it gives you those two responses and you can choose one or the other to get you started in your response.
Let me give you some other examples of AI here. So the other one was the photo one.
So here's a picture. We went to Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk. We did the log ride, you know. And my son, I don't know if you can tell, he's completely soaked. Which is the whole point of the log ride. You want that, right? If you're not wet, then it was a bad log ride.
But you got this guy in the back. And I don't want that guy in the back, right, in the background. So up on the top, I know I can edit a picture by clicking what? Edit, right, OK? And within Edit now, they have something called Cleanup, right? All the other stuff is there, Adjust, and Rotate, and all that. But if I go to Cleanup.
These are the AI tools. And what it's doing is it's looking at my picture. And it's thinking, what do you want to clean up? And if you notice, what did it do? It said, I don't like this picture. You don't want that guy in the back. It didn't say there's something wrong with some other part. It picked out that. And I said, you're right. So what do I want to do?
It's just click on it.
And he's gone, right? But his feet are still there. You've got invisible feet there, but it is, it is glowing. So same thing. I can click on it and his feet in the puddle are gone. And now I have a brand new picture that I could then send to somebody and they'll never know.
Maybe it does look a little weird in the back if I look carefully, but if you didn't know, you wouldn't be able to tell.
I could. Yes, I could get it. So I could, I can manually go here to erase and I can go and I can then. Try to erase all this stuff. I don't know what it'll turn it into, right? I don't know if that's any better. Right, but yeah, okay.
Yeah, you just click on the side. So here's erase and here's retouch, right? Right, and then you just draw over it. The problem is it needs... There's going to be a background, so it needs to choose what to make as the background, right? And so that's why it's, it won't, there are others where I can...
say, put these two people, you know.
And it'll take them out and put them in a sunset scene. There are those, yeah. Or change the background so it's blue skies. Or take these two people and put them on a snowy mountaintop. It will do that, but that's a whole different tool.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, there's the undo there's always yeah, so I can revert to the original or I can undo and there's down here It says reset cleanup, but if I go back to the original I don't like. See, now I'm, you know, you're getting so used to it and I'm just, I'm just gonna keep it with the amount of it. Look at that. And I'm gonna keep that. That's my new picture.
OK. Pretty neat, huh? So that's part of the Apple Intelligence. We're not going to do the memory book. I don't think that's necessary. You could play with that yourself. Again, very easy to do. I don't know if I can find another picture. Yeah, I don't know.
There are obviously things that I could take out in this picture, so if I go to edit and I go to clean up, let's see what it detects. Look at that. All the people in the background, right? Yeah, and it's gotten to the point where, hey, if you're taking a photograph...
You don't want these things in the front because you're focusing on the food and the people, right? You know, remember those days where somebody would leave like a, you know, a can in front of the family photo and you're like, oh, you should have moved that napkin or move the dishes out of the way, the dirty dishes.
You don't need to move the dirty dishes out of the way because all I have to do is just click on it and all these things just disappear. Even the car in the back it found. There's a car right here.
I mean, it's finding every little thing that doesn't seem to match. And it's kind of scary because you'll never take photos the same anymore. Right. Right. And people will expect when they receive a photo from somebody that it looks picture perfect. And so when somebody comes, when somebody shows you a picture of a vacation.
You know, and there's just them in the middle and the background, and you're like, where is everybody? You know they went through and they erased everyone. Yes.
You probably can. So the question was, if there's multiple pictures can I ask AI to choose the best? You probably can, but I don't know. How well it will choose the best. One example is on the new Google phones that are coming out. They actually have a camera
I don't know how to say what what did they call it? They called it like a camera tutorial. So as you're taking the actual photo and you're lining up your photo. It will tell you, why don't you try to move to the side a little bit more, or go from this angle and go down, or move up, or, you know, and it will create a whole different
Perspective to try to give you a better shot of whatever you're trying to take. So it looks at it and gives you the suggestions as if it was a camera. A photography expert with you of how to take a better photo. So yeah, that's coming out on the new Google phones. So each one of these companies are doing something a little bit different.
But that's why when you ask, does Windows have these types of tools? Not yet. Not yet.
So that's one of them. That's the photos. The next one I'm going to show you is notes.
I can't find it, it's too small.
So you can use AI to summarize, right? So for example, if you are a secretary of an organization or a meeting and you take a bunch of notes, right? And you still want to, you don't want to... Put your phone out and transcribe and whatever. You want to manually take notes. Instead of going home to clean it up, you can tell AI to clean it up.
So, for example, this, I know it's about my trip, sorry to go over and over, but there's a lot going on on the trip, obviously. And if you've ever planned a trip for 30 people, you know there's a lot going on. So this has kind of been a set of notes that I've taken over time about what people want to do, where we might go, things that we might want to see. Just jotting down kind of like brainstorming thoughts.
I haven't compiled anything yet to send to anybody. These are just all for me. I could, though, if I wanted to, click on this. So you can see the question marks. The formatting is not too great. I have here an example email that maybe I want to send to a travel agent to kind of ask them what I want to do.
Right, but I haven't come up with what I want to do yet. But here are some of the ideas that I thought of later that I want to do. So I'm going to click on Apple Intelligence. This is in. notes. And it's going to say, what do you want to do? I can proofread it, or I can rewrite it. So I'm going to choose Rewrite.
And it's thinking about it.
And it generated the email for me here.
That's a first, because I tested this last night before I did this with all of you and it worked better. I don't know why. Maybe it's because I'm doing the other stuff at the same time. But here it actually created the email that I can send to a travel agent.
And it talks about exactly what we're talking about. Got rid of the question marks, filled in the blanks, put in the dates of what I wanted from the very top into where I wanted it as a bulleted item. And kind of listed it in a different way. So that again, that's AI working for you. So it can summarize something you've already written.
Questions? I don't want it right now. So remember, that's what it looked like. Really kind of rough, right? And it cleaned it up a lot. The other one is I can have it proofread it. I can create other options, right? Key points, summary list, play with it. Have a good time.
And then because I turned on the chat GPT function, I think where I say compose I can ask it to
I can give it a prompt and just like Gemini or chat GPT, which I showed you before it should
Do what I ask it.
That's a good question.
I know, I know. I don't know why I'm stuck on Rome. Sorry. I get single-minded sometimes.
Wow, there you go. Okay. So it compiled all that stuff and put it in there, and it's there. Okay. So there's the report. I know some of you are reading it. How is it? Not bad? So-so? I don't know. But that is the writing part of the Apple AI that we're talking about, which is Compose.
So they've integrated it in with a lot of their apps, as you can tell. It's in Mail, it's in Photos, this is Apple Notes. Does it work in Pages? Yes. So you can use Pages, which is the word processor. Okay, what if about, what if you use word?
Is there AI in Word? Yes, there is AI in Word. But whose AI is it? Microsoft. So remember, depending on the tool that you're using, you're using the engine and the voice. The AI that is related to the specific app. So if you're using Word, Excel, the different Microsoft products, it's going to be Microsoft. What engine does Microsoft use?
Open AI or chat GPT, which is the same as what Apple uses, too. Okay, so it's gonna I'm not gonna say they're gonna have the same responses, but it's using the same engine in the back end. To give you that response, okay? Yes.
Yes.
Oh, I would just tell AI to write a citation. I would say, AI, can you make sure you put at the end of it, what are they called, a biography list or whatever the last page is? Sources? A list of sources? Yeah. Bibliography, yeah. Yeah, it will. It's really good about citing its sources, if you ask it to.
If you run this on, like, Gemini, which I think I showed you before, right?
Remember, if you use these AI tools in an app, they're still kind of raw. Okay, they're not really like in this case in notes. This is not very good. I don't think okay I'm not too impressed with this Right because I know if I go into chat GPT, and I ask the exact same question. It'll be much more detailed
All right, so each engine will give a different response. I think right now, every app that's out there, or every software company feels that they have to add. AI to their app. And you'll see this no matter what you use, there'll be some announcement. We have AI now. We have AI. It's going to happen with your bank. You're going to get all these things. Oh, we have AI with our bank. We have this and that.
It's just everyone's trying to keep up and stay modern by adding the buzzwords AI to their product. But again, it doesn't necessarily mean that it's used well. So some work better than others. And that's why you have to test it out to learn. So if we're using...
I don't know if I still have my...
So here's chat GPT.
All right, much faster, right? I think much different than the other one. Okay, and I think this one's better. Same engine, same tool. But in each of the different applications, there are different restrictions in what it wants to spit out. And if I go down further in this response, I can then look at the different sources.
Which are somewhere in here. But it does always tell you where it's from.
There you go.
So whatever you want, what should you do? Just ask. And there you go. It's all right there.
And it should be in the right format, because I remember in school I always did my bibliographies with the wrong thing in the wrong place, the comma in the wrong place, and I always got in trouble. So, this should be accurate. And if I wanted to check, I could put it in another AI to proofread it. Too much, I know. But this, again.
is another tool. But yeah, questions.
Yeah, so I mean there are other things that it can do like the AI on the Apple devices. It can help you with your calendaring. It tries to now start to link different things together. So that if you get an email and it has a request for an appointment or an announcement for an appointment, you can just tell it, can you create a calendar item for that for me?
OK, so it's, it's, it's getting there. They're still working on it, but they're trying to make things easier so that you can use some of these other tools and they're intertwined more. with AI kind of doing the administrative assistant work for you, I guess it would be, right? Because that's what's been missing a lot in when you're using these apps and these tools is you know how to use email, but maybe you don't use your calendar because it's a lot easier just to write it down.
Okay, those types of things or in this case. Oh, I didn't know I can transcribe. Oh, I just push record and it's doing it for me Okay
Anybody have an experience with AI that they use? I never asked. Who uses it? Anybody here? Does anybody know? Nobody wants to fess up on the reports that they do.
So that's like in this case. So Google, yeah, has done a great job of integrating the AI into their search, right? But what's also helpful is... When I go to show more, this is obviously a very short summary, and even still short, these little links are the sources that it's citing.
And if I go down further, they've added something new. And it's Dive Deeper in AI mode. So if I click that, it'll take my prompt, my question, And it will then open it up in Gemini with a more detailed response. So it's getting there, right? push you towards using it right but it's a great kind of teaser here to get started because it's so much more helpful than oh okay i'm going to go to each of these links
And I honestly, now that I see this first response, what is this? Wikipedia, right? That used to be the go-to for a lot of us when we wanted to look up information. I think this AI stuff is really going to hurt how Wikipedia is being used, primarily because in academia they recommend not to use Wikipedia as a resource for reference.
So I don't know if AI is using it. And if AI is not using it and they're passing Wikipedia, Wikipedia might disappear. OK, so it's interesting. We'll see. We'll see what happens. But who knows? Because the Britannica is still here. It's holding strong. You all laugh. I know you had the volume sets. I love those volume sets of Britannica's.
That was the thing, right? We would have these big shelves full of all the Britannicas, right? The bigger the collection, the better the resources we have. They are still holding on. But who's looking at that anymore, right? Because all you have to do is just read what's up here now. Okay? And click it from up there.
Questions? No? But what's also interesting is it opens up new opportunities, too. So, in this first... search. I can see it opens up YouTube, which is interesting. Okay, so I could watch something about the fall of Rome in 13 minutes, right? It brings me to another website called ThoughtCo.
So it's introducing me also to these new resources that are on the web that others might know of, have been around for a long time, but I've never found it because it's never been able to get to the prime top spot in Google. So this has kind of leveled the playing field, and now there's these new websites, not new but old, kind of resurging because they're being introduced through AI.
And AI is using them and introducing them to a new population. And if I click on it, I can then read it. And if I say, oh, this is pretty interesting. What is this website? And you can see it's a website about different information academics. And maybe you'll stay there and use it for another one.
Questions?
That's right, you're right. Is it reputable? I don't know. Again, it's like anything. Always do your own research. Britannica does come up. I mean, I think Britannica is known as being legitimate still, so maybe now is the time where Wikipedia, which destroyed Britannica...
It's now going to have a flip-flop maybe, and maybe Britannica can kind of come back as the authority, and Wikipedia will have a harder time. We'll see what happens. It's interesting, if you watch it. OK. Enjoy AI. Play with it. Explore it. See what it can do for you. I've introduced the tools. Don't worry. It's going to pop up on your screen a lot more. It's going to remind you that it's there. But the main thing is, don't be afraid and try it. Yes.
But what about what he started with?
Oh, you want to see what how it transcribes it. So it's still recording. It's that notion right here on the top. So if I go back to my notion, which is here and I choose stop.
