☑ Sample data to follow along: 1drv.ms/x/s!AmxrofZZlZ-wheVV6LiSsTR4p6qViA?e=Cfs6F6 ☑ Make a Dashboard in Bricks: bit.ly/thebricks2dashboard ☑ Bricks Homepage: bit.ly/thebricks2homepage
A brilliant run through of a very useful AI tool that can be used by spreadsheet experts and those who understand less! I shared this video with lots of people of different abilities with spreadsheets. At last AI helping humans save time! Thanks Kevin!
Thanks for bringing this up. We built Bricks to prioritize privacy and security. Our platform is built on top of AWS infrastructure which means your data is stored securely with industry-leading data protection measures. On top of that, we never use any user data for AI training purposes. I'll add a section to our website to make this more clear for others
Good question, a few other folks have asked the same question. We built Bricks to prioritize privacy and security. Our platform is built on top of AWS infrastructure which means your data is stored securely with industry-leading data protection measures. On top of that, we never use any user data for AI training purposes. I'll add a section to our website to make this more clear
Brilliant but it would be nice if we could send a pivot table to the board as well. Combo charts next please to include a secondary axis. Well done though and a brilliant presentation by Kevin as always.
Quick note that OpenAI had an outage unfortunately this morning, which affects Bricks. It should be running again. Let me know if you encounter any other issues.
Hi Kevin. Can this Bricks 'tool' be incorporated (published) into a website that allows members/clients of the website to insert their own data; and that such data be organised and saved on the website. I'm thinking about doing something useful for diabetics to record their bloodsugar levels?
The risk of hallucinations with this tool should be lower compared to some other AI tools. It primarily relies on transforming your own data and works transparently by showing you exactly what it's doing with the data. This ensures more accurate and reliable outputs, minimizing the chance of introducing errors or "hallucinations."