Test Information Space

Gemini can now access and create Google Calendar events
Gemini can now access and create Google Calendar events
(The BuJo, SloMo, or RoBo methods seem to start small to see the whole picture and then scope in. That may look like a single page showing the week, month, quarter, or year's dates to get the values/goals/priorities then the master task list and then distributing them across the two-page spreads down to day times. People used to do this shuffling Rolodex cards into order, e.g. next contact rather than action. You can use a whiteboard, too. Or the planners also have dedicated book formats. Lists get their own pages by topic, e.g. reading, shopping, or cooking. Besides taxes, businesses also schedule social media. For sanity, the handwritten and digital would match formats such as scheduling columns. Books can be rotated sideways. Google Calendar has multiple views and integrates with other apps. MS Copilot finds meeting times.)
·9to5google.com·
Gemini can now access and create Google Calendar events
PlanRunner2024 - Poe
PlanRunner2024 - Poe

Prior Prompt Set: Classify ideas in the text and outline a blog post on planning methods. (Upload Rocketbook PDF with 10 pages.) What are the various types of essay or blog writing styles to cover this kind of topic? What about if the topic was the use of new chatbots for planning in contrast to the old ways directly from spreadsheets, apps, schedulers, notebooks, journals, or index cards? What is the upshot, e.g. a prompt list to template the format and set up the content? Detail a contextual prompt as a style guide to use for a customized chatbot that specializes in daily and weekly planning. The goal is to allow the user to engage with the chatbot to develop their plans on a continuous basis. What is a good handle name for this chatbot? What is good greeting message for such a chatbot to cue the user?

·poe.com·
PlanRunner2024 - Poe
A Prayer App Turns to TikTok to Find Its Flock
A Prayer App Turns to TikTok to Find Its Flock
(Soul was a classic historical causal or origin story. Redemption was newer. Ideologies have their value ranks. May also be a booster to get out the hoosegow. Not to be confused with Halo, except for the legendary Cortana.)
·nytimes.com·
A Prayer App Turns to TikTok to Find Its Flock
Rosen, D., Oh, Y., Chesebrough, C., Zhang, F. Z., & Kounios, J. (2024). Creative flow as optimized processing: Evidence from brain oscillations during jazz improvisations by expert and non-expert musicians. Neuropsychologia, 108824.
Rosen, D., Oh, Y., Chesebrough, C., Zhang, F. Z., & Kounios, J. (2024). Creative flow as optimized processing: Evidence from brain oscillations during jazz improvisations by expert and non-expert musicians. Neuropsychologia, 108824.
·pdf.sciencedirectassets.com·
Rosen, D., Oh, Y., Chesebrough, C., Zhang, F. Z., & Kounios, J. (2024). Creative flow as optimized processing: Evidence from brain oscillations during jazz improvisations by expert and non-expert musicians. Neuropsychologia, 108824.
Ross, L. Mock Juries, Real Trials: How to Solve (some) Problems with Jury Science.
Ross, L. Mock Juries, Real Trials: How to Solve (some) Problems with Jury Science.

(Systems like eJury claim to highlight issues for prep. The states that host them may have some controversial legislation that invites reactions. Separately, within organizations, shadow AI is considered to be extraneous information, possibly pernicious although formerly heroic for surviving the Winter.)

·philpapers.org·
Ross, L. Mock Juries, Real Trials: How to Solve (some) Problems with Jury Science.
Pan, C. A., Yakhmi, S., Iyer, T. P., Strasnick, E., Zhang, A. X., & Bernstein, M. S. (2022). Comparing the perceived legitimacy of content moderation processes: Contractors, algorithms, expert panels, and digital juries. Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction, 6(CSCW1), 1-31.
Pan, C. A., Yakhmi, S., Iyer, T. P., Strasnick, E., Zhang, A. X., & Bernstein, M. S. (2022). Comparing the perceived legitimacy of content moderation processes: Contractors, algorithms, expert panels, and digital juries. Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction, 6(CSCW1), 1-31.
Digital juries.
·dl.acm.org·
Pan, C. A., Yakhmi, S., Iyer, T. P., Strasnick, E., Zhang, A. X., & Bernstein, M. S. (2022). Comparing the perceived legitimacy of content moderation processes: Contractors, algorithms, expert panels, and digital juries. Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction, 6(CSCW1), 1-31.
Gordon, M. L., Lam, M. S., Park, J. S., Patel, K., Hancock, J., Hashimoto, T., & Bernstein, M. S. (2022, April). Jury learning: Integrating dissenting voices into machine learning models. In Proceedings of the 2022 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (pp. 1-19).
Gordon, M. L., Lam, M. S., Park, J. S., Patel, K., Hancock, J., Hashimoto, T., & Bernstein, M. S. (2022, April). Jury learning: Integrating dissenting voices into machine learning models. In Proceedings of the 2022 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (pp. 1-19).
(How is a juror instructed to eliminate implicit bias? What would be the specifics of a course that changed their minds? This is fairly easy to trigger in practice, e.g. as subtext to invoke irony.)
·dl.acm.org·
Gordon, M. L., Lam, M. S., Park, J. S., Patel, K., Hancock, J., Hashimoto, T., & Bernstein, M. S. (2022, April). Jury learning: Integrating dissenting voices into machine learning models. In Proceedings of the 2022 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (pp. 1-19).