To be honest I feel quite ambivalent about AI and largely avoid its use, where I can. I try to ignore the AI information presented within search engines and I don't usually use it to create anything etc etc. I'm worried about copyright issues for instance, and how it's already replacing garden writers who have extensive knowledge gained over many years of experience. Articles can be generated quickly, often with dubious content which is often published without fact checking first. I'm reminded of a central tenet from my time in IT; Garbage In, Garbage Out (aka GIGO), right? However NAH recently benefitted from AI technology when a surgeon assisted by a robot using CT scan data peered deep into his lung and determined the small lump there is benign, thus avoiding him losing around a third of his lung. The latter operation was the preferred approach until the robot technique was developed and often the removed material revealed a benign lump rather than a tumour. We...
I like the photos.
ReplyDeleteTroy
The garden really has benefitted from the very heavy downpours we had a few weeks back and the sunshine of late. x
ReplyDeleteThat is the lush green that shout Britain to you every time.
ReplyDeleteLooking good VP! xx
ReplyDeleteThose are good views to have (minus the bins). ;-) Everything is looking so lush and green.
ReplyDeleteWonderful, wonderful, wonderful. A delight for the eyes
ReplyDeleteThe blue bin could be straightened & used as a garden focal point. ;^) As they say on my kids' Webkinz, "Good Growing."
ReplyDeleteTexas Travellers - thanks.
ReplyDeleteLouise - it sure has! It's great at the moment isn't it?
dnd - you're so right and we take it all for granted.
Flighty - thanks, but not so at the allotment. I'll tell you about it some time!
Yolanda & MMD - each time I take the picture from the top of the plot I kick myself for not straightening the bins. I'd have to empty them first though!
viooltje - thanks so much and you've been showing some goodies over at your place too I see!