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U.S. braces for possible costly government shutdown
On Oct. 1, the U.S. government is set to shut down, unleashing real and wide-ranging financial hardship on American families, workers and businesses.
Indiana 250: Kristin Mays-Corbitt
Kristin Mays-Corbitt is president and CEO of Mays Chemical Co. Inc., which specializes in the distribution of chemicals for the food, pharmaceutical and personal care industries and is one of the 40 largest chemical distributors in North America.
Pete the Planner: Two-timing your financial advisers isn’t the way
You’re clearly not winning, your advisers are undoubtedly frustrated by you, and frankly I’m frustrated by this situation too.
‘An inevitable reality’: ISBA gears up for yearlong series on AI
The 2023 annual summit, next Thursday and Friday, will serve as the launch for a yearlong series called “AI in the Legal Industry: An ISBA Series Presented by LexisNexis.”
Bohanon and Horowitz: New York City can’t guarantee shelter for all oppressed
| Cecil Bohanon and John Horowitz
Economic reality is currently trumping political aspiration in New York City.
New night-vision technology developed at Purdue creating a buzz
A new, AI-assisted form of thermal vision under development at Purdue University could one day revolutionize everything from sensors in self-driving cars to remote patient monitoring in medical facilities.
Keeping up with changing AI is educational challenge
Frank Emmert of the IU McKinney School of Law talks about how the legal and ethical questions that will arise from the increasing use of artificial intelligence could test current laws and courts’ ability to untangle the technology.
How will AI impact Indiana’s workforce? It’s complicated.
Advances in technology traditionally have had the biggest impact on more physical jobs, but generative AI tools will likely be most disruptive for jobs that require brains, not brawn.
Higher education, training institutions look to keep up with AI advancements
Indiana’s major state universities are making big additions in artificial intelligence academic programs.
Adrianne Slash and Linda Heitzman: AI profiles of candidates include made-up stuff
| Adrianne Slash and Linda Heitzman
We had Bard profile the mayoral races in Carmel, Evansville and Indianapolis. Each report came back in seconds.
Here are 5 popular apps that let you try out AI
Use these to to create different types of media, including audio, text, business presentations, images and more.
Still primitive in music, visual arts and literature, AI commands attention
Creative work is being done quickly and at an affordable price, thanks to AI software that generates text, images and other media. But drawbacks of AI include work that’s generated without compensation and attribution for source material.
Experiments with chatbots produce some promising prompts
Remember: The results produced by chatbots are not always accurate. AI experts warn against using anything produced by a chatbot without verifying the results.
State agencies, regulators, lawmakers brace for AI future
Fears about the potential misuse or unintended consequences of AI prompted more than half of all U.S. states to introduce AI legislation in the 2023 legislative session.
This glossary will help jumpstart your AI exploration
Artificial intelligence—or AI—refers to the simulation of human intelligence in machines that are programmed to think and learn like humans.
Putting AI to the test: Write a poem about the Indy 500 winner
IBJ also used Midjourney, an independent generative AI tool that operates through the Discord messaging app, to create an illustration for the poem.
Editorial: If you’re not registered to vote, you have until Oct. 10 to do so
In presidential election years, the percentage of eligible Hoosiers registered to vote dropped from 71.3% in 2012 to 69.3% in 2020.
Lesley Weidenbener: My own experiments with AI chatbots
I asked ChatGPT to “write a newspaper story about the history of the Indianapolis Business Journal.” The result—produced in seconds—was a flowery, verbose and often incorrect take on our news organization.
Bob Behning and Linda Rogers: IPS should capitalize on successful partnerships
We urge IPS and its governing body to reconsider their position on unused buildings and allow the buildings to be used to educate the community’s children.