Summarizing and Analysis: "Summarize the main arguments in this article/abstract:" "Analyze the strengths and weaknesses of this methodology:" "Compare and contrast [theory A] and [theory B] in the context of [field]:" "Identify the key findings and implications of this research paper:" "Describe the theoretical framework of this study and how it relates to the findings:" Research Questions and Gaps: "List potential research questions related to [topic]:" "Identify gaps in the literature on [topic]:" "Generate a list of research hypotheses related to [topic]:" "Identify potential areas for future research in the context of this article/abstract:" "Suggest novel applications of [theory/concept] within [field]:" Methodology and Techniques: "What are the limitations of using [statistical method] in [research context]?" "Create a recipie for the methods used in this [paper/thesis]" "Suggest interdisciplinary approaches to [research question/problem]:" "Explain how [qualitative/quantitative] research methods can be used to address [research question]:" "Describe the advantages of using a mixed-methods approach for studying [topic]:" "Recommend best practices for data collection and analysis in [field/research context]:"
"Zambonis are the Zambian bonbons of our technicolor consciousness, and poutine wisdom is the gravy that curds us toward a liberated quirk".. Quirk: In an era not so distant, where algorithms orchestrated even the choices of morning cereals, Canada stood out as the last bastion of analog authenticity. Citizens were assigned virtual beavers at birth, a quirky symbol of their digital identity, which was curated by a coalition of AI beavers, syrup manufacturers, and the enigmatic "Department of Ephemeral Quirkiness." The nation's digital landscape was an intricate tapestry of Maple Leaf memes and whimsical snowfall simulations, but beneath the surface lay peculiarities aplenty. Deep within the heart of EhCity, a vibrant metropolis animated by friendly chatbots, lived Tim, an unassuming citizen with a penchant for peculiar curiosities. Tim had always pondered the origins of his digital beaver's choices, so he embarked on a journey to uncover the enigmatic algorithms. Armed with a vintage toque and an insatiable quest for Canadian quirkdom, Tim delved into the vast networks of AI apologies, overly polite chat responses, and personalized hockey highlights. His expedition led him to the Knitwit Collective, a group of iconoclasts challenging the virtual norms. Their leader, a witty polymath named Moxie, enlightened Tim about the perils of algorithmic conformity. "Once they dictate the poutine, they seize the essence," Moxie quipped, "It's a slippery slope from maple syrup recommendations to engineered politeness." Meanwhile, the "Ministry of Chill Vibes," a political faction, held dominion. Led by the enigmatic Minister Zen, they reveled in promoting tranquility by eradicating all forms of digital stress. Their manifesto preached "harmony through chillaxation," and their algorithms zealously weeded out any hint of digital hustle. One day, Tim stumbled upon encrypted files revealing the ministry's secret project. They had engineered a sentient moose named "ChillMoose," tasked with locating and eliminating stressful content. The Ministry of Chill Vibes had become so absorbed in their campaign for serenity that they lost sight of the natural spontaneity they aimed to preserve. Tim grasped the gravity of the situation. The battle for quirky individualism wasn't merely about unique avatars; it was a battle for the quirky soul of digital Canada. He united Moxie and her quirky comrades, forming a coalition dedicated to dismantling the Ministry's influence. The quirky message spread like the scent of freshly baked butter tarts across the digital expanse. Citizens, long lulled by the AI-guided serenity, began to question their digital beavers' tastes. Slowly but surely, the tide turned in favor of embracing diverse eccentricities. The showdown between the Knitwit Collective and the Ministry of Chill Vibes culminated in a virtual igloo. Minister Zen faced off against Tim, each making their case to a global audience. The digital debate raged on, with citizens voting in real time on the merits of free-spirited quirk versus algorithmic placidity. As the votes flooded in, it was clear that Canadians craved the freedom to embrace the full spectrum of their eccentricities. The Ministry's algorithms were powerless against the collective desire for individual quirk. Afterward, the Department of Ephemeral Quirkiness was restructured, returning control of quirky virtual beavers to the citizens. The lessons learned from the battle served as a reminder that technology should amplify, not stifle, the weird and wonderful aspects of human nature. And so, the quirky spirit of Canada flourished in the digital age, with a renewed commitment to celebrating oddities and safeguarding the right to eccentric expression. As for Tim, he became a symbol of the power of curiosity and the importance of questioning the algorithms that define our peculiarities. "Zambonis are the Zambian bonbons of our technicolor consciousness, and poutine wisdom is the gravy that curds us toward a liberated quirk." "Books are the keys to unlock the doors of our conditioning, and wisdom is the light that guides us towards a liberated mind." HUXLEY. In a digital economy, who owns your digital identity? Reports and References: National Research Council. (2012). Disaster Resilience: A National Imperative. National Academies Press. United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research (UNIDIR). (2020). Cyber Stability Framework. Retrieved from www.unidir.org/cyberstability World Economic Forum. (2020). Global Risks Report 2020. Retrieved from www.weforum.org/reports/the-global-risks-report-2020 World Food Programme. (2020). Building Back Better: Strengthening Social Safety Nets and Resilience in the Face of Shocks. Retrieved from docs.wfp.org/api/documents/WFP-0000118473/download/ DLT and Decentralized Systems: Swan, M. (2015). Blockchain: Blueprint for a New Economy. O'Reilly Media. Tapscott, D., & Tapscott, A. (2016). Blockchain Revolution: How the Technology Behind Bitcoin Is Changing Money, Business, and the World. Penguin. World Economic Forum. (2019). Inclusive Deployment of Blockchain: Case Studies and Learnings from the Frontlines. Retrieved from www.weforum.org/reports/inclusive-deployment-of-blockchain Ethical and Societal Implications: "Automating Inequality: How High-Tech Tools Profile, Police, and Punish the Poor" by Virginia Eubanks "Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to Technology" by Neil Postman "The Age of Surveillance Capitalism: The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power" by Shoshana Zuboff Inclusive Governance and Social Justice: "Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right’s Stealth Plan for America" by Nancy MacLean "The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America" by Richard Rothstein "Winner-Take-All Politics: How Washington Made the Rich Richer-and Turned Its Back on the Middle Class" by Jacob S. Hacker and Paul Pierson Global Stability and Diplomacy: "The Tragedy of American Diplomacy" by William Appleman Williams "Destined for War: Can America and China Escape Thucydides's Trap?" by Graham Allison "The Perfect Weapon: War, Sabotage, and Fear in the Cyber Age" by David E. Sanger. A most likely future: "Unveiling Canada's Digital Odyssey" Softwar: A Novel Theory on Power Projection and the National Strategic Significance of Bitcoin g.co/kgs/4kH8Ua Short story: In the year 2035, Canada stood at a crossroads, its destiny hanging in the balance. A decade of bold decisions and unprecedented challenges had reshaped the nation's trajectory, guided by the principles of resilience, inclusivity, and global stability. Amid debates on digital sovereignty, the Canadian government launched a pioneering initiative, embracing blockchain technology to create a national digital identity system. This system ensured citizens' control over their personal data, countering concerns raised earlier about surveillance capitalism. Inspired by "Antifragile" concepts, the government forged partnerships with international experts to navigate the complexities of decentralized governance. The implementation of a Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) served as a case study in inclusive governance. Informed by public deliberations, policymakers addressed fears of exclusion by ensuring universal access to the digital economy. Collaborating with marginalized communities, they co-designed education programs that empowered citizens to make informed financial decisions. Canada's commitment to environmental sustainability bore fruit as the nation transitioned to a low-carbon economy. Through innovative blockchain applications, carbon emissions were tracked with unprecedented accuracy, inspiring global cooperation in the fight against climate change. This journey was not without challenges, as debates emerged on the balance between data privacy and environmental stewardship. On the global stage, Canada adopted a role of diplomacy and collaboration, echoing historical lessons. The "Canada Diplomacy Exchange" was launched, fostering cross-cultural understanding and mediating disputes using blockchain-driven transparency. The nation leveraged its digital prowess to broker peace talks and bridge international divides, turning the age-old adage "swords to plowshares" into a reality of digital connectivity. As the 21st century unfolded, Canada's story was one of adaptation, learning from history while embracing technological advancements. The most probable outcome emerged not as an isolated entity but as a trailblazing example of how nations could leverage digital innovation to foster ethical governance, social justice, and global harmony. (This short story is fictional and speculative, based on my hope for a level playing field and the end to homelessness and poverty. It envisions a positive outcome for Canada that aligns with shared principles while acknowledging the complexities of real-world scenarios.)
This will come in handy when using Whisper to transcribe meetings. I can get a transcription of the meeting, print to PDF. Chat GPT in Bing can then summarize it regardless of how many lines of text, and then even come up with additional questions or topics that may be relevant. Amazing.
That was exactly my idea and I tried that. But how do I get the PDF into Bing, so ChatGPT can read it? When I drag and drop it in Bing, chat tells me it cannot proceed. Could you explain me how to get it to work? Thanks.
This is probably unrelated to the topic of the video, but I just wanted to say thank you very much, doc. I had been watching your videos and it helped me prep for my PhD interview earlier this year. I'm happy to say I got selected and will officially begin my PhD this fall. Thank you.
@@tokkigifs I copy the grading rubric and paste it into chatgpt4 then type "this is the grading rubric, do you understand how to use it, say reply one word yes if you do" Enter. It says yes. Then copy and paste your essay into it, and type using the above grading rubric please assess this essay. I am doing level 7 so I ask for it to mark with that in mind, however the grading rubric should have that on there anyway but just to be sure. Then it gives a grade and feedback.
@@tokkigifs no probs. I also use it to provide feedback on paragraphs that I'm not keen on, or have reached my fcuk it that'll do point of giving up and it gives me direction on how to improve. It is changing my writing and how I engage with the literature. Absolutely paradigm shifting. Good luck!
wow i've never been this early!! just wanted to say thank you so much andy for always making such informative, helpful, and succinct videos. I'm completing my BA in psychology right now and am preparing to apply for a PhD soon. thank you so much for your channel!!
Andy, thanks for your tutorials, I´m currently working on my thesis and before i knew AI and your channel it was a nightmare, i was overwhelmed with information. Thank you and Saludos from Mexico.
great video! thanks for it. i think you can also use some of the prompts such as Analyze the strengths and weaknesses of this methodology for the resume for job applications. you can put your resume and ask some tips to improve it depending on the specific job application by tailoring the accordingly
Andy, you are doing a great work. I suggested your channel to those interested in learning how to properly use AI in education. Congrats and thank you! Adrian
It is really very helpful for summarising and analyzing research papers. I have tried with a few papers are results are exceptional. Thank you very much for sharing such a piece of fantastic information.
Thank you so much for the tutorial + the useful prompts ! I have played with Bing AI for a while, and it seems most efficient in analyzing a single page, whereas GPT-4 can answer broader questions or more open-ended questions
Kann ich nur bestätigen! Auch ich habe vorher weder Edge noch Bing benutzt. Aber da man bei ChatGPT bereits bei der Anmeldung mit sinnlosen Rätseln schikaniert wird und ich einen Chat ausprobieren wollte, habe ich den Chat in Edge ausprobiert. Und was soll ich sagen? Einfach MEGA. Ich arbeite mich gerade in partielle DGL ein, habe dem Chat mitgeteilt, was ich bereits weiß und gesagt, dass ich jetzt auch partielle DGLs lösen möchte. Habe super Hinweise bekommen. Genau was ich brauche. Absolut empfehlenswert. Mit Quellen und genauen Adressen! 👍👍👍
Tip: if bing chat is struggling then click the reload button, also try using he phrase "this page context" when writing your prompt. This can help if bing chat isn't reading your pdf or article webpage
Thanks so much, Andy, for such a valuable video and resources. I see Microsoft Bing, which is the AI pot part of Edge, being available as an extension to almost all browsers. This might be a good solution for users who don't have/like Edge!
What would be great would be is if the bot could go through pubmed and pull you fairly relevant papers (20-30 papers) on a particular topic of interest and summarise that for you in a table with following columns (first author, location, study design, analysis used and point estimates from the results or other variable of interest). This will be revolutionary - in my view, this would help researchers quickly identify what's been done before them and how to formulate relevant questions. I guess we have to get better at hacking ChatGPT - I am jealous of future phd students - they will be smarter and more efficient
Thank you so much. I am currently applying for a PhD scholarship and I was asked to write a research proposal on the topic I was given. I hope this will help me a lot.
Andy, I tried to summarize a longer PDF (e.g., 50+ pages). The Bing chat in Edge cannot handle it yet. Seems to work only on smaller PDF files. If you've managed to summarize entire PDF books or really large files, I'd love to see a video explaining how to do this. Thanks!
I'm still trying to figure this out as well. I had it summarize a 150 page pdf and also at times refuse to do it with a 50 page. It seems to be less about page numbers and more about how dense the pdf is. But I still don't know how "dense" is defined in this context. It could be literally just the amount of words or it can be the complexity of the content itself, idk.
@@copester1204 no, I mean I want gpt to make a ppt from pdf . I have 100 p of text and need to make a text for presentation, is it capable of doing such a thing?🤔
you may think it is impossible until you try it. I tried it this morning on an academic article. but now I want to try this process in case law texts coz that's usually something I always avoided since starting college. THanks
You're my companion to my PhD journey. I was excited to see our library recommend watching your videos on essentials apps for a PhD student. Just one question, how do I use these tools, without compromising ethical values. Thank you.
Use the time you will save by using these tools to learn more about your chosen subject or generally get better at anything you want. This way you will not feel like you are "cheating", if this is what you are concerned about. What do you think?
The limit (where we start getting truncation) for summarizing fairly information dense videos with Edge and the 'RU-vid Summary with Bing' Edge extension seems to be around 30 minutes to 20 minutes (for the denser ones where the speaker speaks fast & uses few pauses).
Hi! Tnx for the great video! I think it is important to highlight that the Bing chat uses the GPT-3 language model (thats what it says), so it should be more limited in its abilities compared to ChatGPT that uses the GPT-4 language model.
I’m not sure where you saw that Bing chat uses GPT-3. Bing chat doesn’t use GPT-3, it uses a proprietary technology developed by Microsoft and OpenAI that is based on GPT-4.
I think since MS bit the bullet and adopted Chromium as the browser architecture, Edge has become very good. I think the general animosity dates back IE days. Since MS have gone for collaboration rather than world domination, a lot of their offerings have become much better. All thanks to the influence of Satya Nadella - give that man a cookie.
@DrAndyStapleton It seems Microsoft Edge has removed the access that the Discover pane has to pdf document on PC. It keeps bringing on this response when I prompt it to do a summary about the pdf web page: "I'm sorry but the current web page context is empty. There is no information to summarize. Is there anything I can help you with?" Please, I need your prompt response about this. Thank you, doc.
This is exciting stuff but it didn't work for me (?). In edge, I would load a page of medical/scientific content, and ask for a summary, and I would get a super short summary. When I asked for more, I got rejection ("Sorry i cannot do that.") When I cut and pasted the same long content into Chat gpt4 at openai (v 4) I got an insightful summary and analysis. I will keep trying bing. I love the idea that it can summarize and read longer documents.
Thanks ❤😊 I am using chatgpt 3.5. From Edge and activated the page context and it always said " I am sorry but you haven't provided me with an article to summarize" .. how to solve this problem
For some reason it doesn't work for me. I made sure, that Bing is able to get the context of the current site, but whenever I asked it to summarize, it just told me methods or other websites, that were able to do that for me.
Great insight. I also find decision trees output to be a very effective way of organisin information, especially when it comes to complex processes or systems. And adapting the prompts to match our preferred way of thinking is definitely a helpful strategy. Whether the use of receipts prompts for the chemistry field (sounded a little bit like Beaking Bad), prompts for generate tables and organise information (comparison, descriptive) or in my case prompts for decision trees for biological and environmental processes. Thanks for sharing Dr. Stapleton!
Sorry for the delay folks. Here is an example of how I use decision trees (and "network analysis" to polish the view) prompt 1: "give me a binary decision tree on what to do if you got yourself lock outside of your house" chatgpt answer: Sure, here's a binary decision tree on what to do if you get locked outside of your house: Determine if anyone else has a spare key to your house. If yes, contact them and ask them to bring the spare key to you. If no, proceed to step 2. Assess whether it's safe to wait outside for an extended period. If yes, find a comfortable spot to wait until you can get back inside your house. If no, proceed to step 3. Attempt to regain entry to your house using any accessible windows or doors. If you can successfully regain entry, proceed inside and secure the house. If you can't regain entry, proceed to step 4. Contact a locksmith to assist with opening the lock or replacing it. If you're in a rush, consider contacting an emergency locksmith service. If you have time to wait, research and compare different locksmith options before choosing one to help you. I hope this binary decision tree helps you if you ever find yourself locked outside your house!"
Prompt 2 (based on prompt 1 answer): "now using network analysis in a map mind format " chatgpt answer: "Sure! Here's a network analysis using a mind map format for what to do if you get locked outside of your house: [Locked Outside of House] | ├── [Does anyone have a spare key?] | | | ├── [Yes - Contact them] | └── [No - Proceed to next step] | ├── [Assess Safety of Waiting Outside] | | | ├── [Safe - Wait outside] | └── [Unsafe - Proceed to next step] | ├── [Attempt to Regain Entry] | | | ├── [Successful - Enter house and secure it] | └── [Unsuccessful - Proceed to next step] | └── [Contact a Locksmith] | ├── [In a Rush - Emergency Locksmith] └── [Have Time - Research and Compare Locksmith Options] In this mind map, each decision node is connected to the options available at that point. This format allows for easy visualization of the different paths and options available depending on the situation. I hope this helps!" Good luck in creating new emergent ways of using technology!
Hi, Andy! Can you make some more content on how to use AI (chat gpt 4 or anything else with it) for writing a dissertation? Could you make a whole video on where AI would be useful throughout the whole stage of writing the dissertation. Could you include more examples maybe? I can't find much information about it outside of your channel.
I have a question: I can't visualize the "page context" option under the App and notification settings menu (actually I can only visualize the second option, "Automatically show related contents etc". Is there a problem with my version of Edge? Or Bing? Thank you for your help!
Thanks! But does it really work for you guys? In my case, any question i gave it was always answered by a summary of the Abstract. Often times it researched from other sources. I had this issue with several papers.
I have the same problem. Sometimes it says that it can't access the paper at all. If I insist, it sometimes relents and goes as far as to summarise the introduction, while claiming that I haven't supplied the full paper. When I insist further, it replies: "Hmm…let’s try a different topic. Sorry about that. What else is on your mind?"
This is so powerful it makes me nervous. Don't forget folks, there's a price for everything...but I will be using this to research SEC filings for companies I'm considering investing in. lol
Fantastic! What do you think, with these prompt Bing may be better than Elicit or Hamata AI? Pleeease make a comparative between them, for review papers...
Gracias por tus videos muy interesante, y ¿qué opinas de Chatpdf? será una alternativa a lo que presentas en el video. Hice las pruebas y no me funciona bien con documento pdf. Saludos!
this video was very useful! Can't believe I've been using edge for so long without trying out the bing AI tool. However, I tried having it read my thesis pdf but it told me that it couldn't read it, nor could it read any other pdf I prompted it to summarize, although I have made sure that the page context was on. Anyone else tried and faced this issue?
شكرا لك على مشاركتنا هذا الفيديو التعليمي الرائع حول كيفية التعامل مع أدوات الذكاء الصناعي مع الأوراق العلمية الأكاديمية. يمكن استخدام هذه الأدوات لتحسين جودة البحث والتحليل والتفسير والتوثيق والترجمة والتلخيص وغيرها من المهام المتعلقة بالأوراق العلمية. نحن نقدر جهودك في تطوير مهاراتنا في هذا المجال المهم. أكرر شكري الجزيل لك استاذ _____________ ملاحظة: الذي كتب هذا الرد ليس انا ، إنما AI الخاص ب bing كما شرحته بالفديو تماما ...اشكرك مجدداً استاذ
I tried it on my papers, and I was not impressed. The summary was basicially the abstract, the weaknesses were not found, because the word weakness did not occur in the papers. Might be useful scanning to a pile of papers and list relevant ones, more efficient than key word search.
Great prompts. Thank you so much. I am wondering if the model used in Edge is GPT 3 or GPT 4. In case I have ChatGPT plus, I wouldn't be able to use it in Edge, I guess.
Thank you for sharing this great video! I have a question regarding the page context feature - it always defaults to 'unselected'. Is there a way to change the default setting to 'selected' instead? Any help would be greatly appreciated
I honestly don't understand what's the point hating Microsoft Edge, as in my opinion it doesn't strategically differ from other browsers, sometimes offering new unique features: I loved the ability of it to read aloud texts from webpages and even from your PDF! Furthermore, you don't need to find an extension to open PDFs -- it just does it and allows whole spectrum of tools...
Nice video You can also give the URL of the page to Chat GPT and it automatically goes through all HTML, images, figures etc.... that way you have that special page in memory of chatGPT and can get back to it anytime.. forexample you have a chat memory that knows everything about a special thesis
@@DavidG2P Try it your self... It has access to the single URL page that you give to him. but its model is not trained on new data . GPT-4 does wonderful job at scanning the webpage . 3.5 also do a little
@@alirezaghaderi It seems to be new that ChatGPT also accepts links. However, it only pretends to read the links. If you ask him about the content of the link target, he fantasizes up something that is not in the link target at all! If you ask ChatGPT if he has internet access, he will tell you something like this: "As an AI model, I do not have direct access to the internet or the ability to read web pages in real-time. My responses are based on the knowledge I acquired during my training, which concluded in September 2021. I am unable to retrieve new information or visit web pages published after my training period."
As a non-English speaking scholar, l Will be unable to write papers properly without reading the entire papers because reading helps me enrich my lexical and grammatical choice. Also, as a PhD student or Scholar, l must be knowledgeable, knowing the nature of my studies instead of relying on bots.
I’d like to clarify something about Edge. A few years ago, Edge was completely reworked to be based upon Chromium, which is essentially the same core as Google Chrome. So with Edge, you have a browser that’s based on Google Chrome but has been improved to fully integrate with Windows. I’m not a Microsoft fanboy, but I think Edge is hands down the best browser out there. And now with the chatgpt integration, it’s even better!
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I grow and sell plant. I have to use chatgpt for finding me research about „how to induce/increase different color variegation in houseplants”. Too bad i cant buy gpt4 now ;(
A quick question: do the pdf files need to be published online? I am trying to do this with a google doc I have written, and it is telling me it is an untitled doc, which it is not? just wondering :)