Daily Archives: January 20, 2025
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Saying no to patches
ISSUE 22.03 • 2025-01-20 PATCH WATCH
By Susan Bradley
Both Apple and Microsoft are providing updates and options that are unnecessary.
The good news for you Apple users is that the company is not taking a page out of Microsoft’s forced-change model and instead is letting us easily opt out of AI features. Clearly, it learned from its 2014 blunder — forcing the U2 album Songs of Innocence to iTunes on all iPhones.
When you receive a pop-up on your Apple device that supports Apple Intelligence, you get a “Not now” option that allows you to easily dismiss the request. For now, Apple’s AI is still somewhat limited and covers only writing, email, and Siri. More AI capabilities are to come later, but it’s good to see that we can easily opt out.
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (22.03.0, 2025-01-20).
This story also appears in our public Newsletter. -
Looking back, looking forward
LEGAL BRIEF
By Max Stul Oppenheimer, Esq.
The big tech story of 2024 was, by far, artificial intelligence.
Although it was often portrayed as sui generis (Latin for “we’ve never seen anything like it, and we need to start thinking from scratch …”), the emergence of artificial intelligence into public use and consciousness highlighted (and added urgency to) old issues, more than it created any new ones.
The questions — who owns personal information, where does the right to privacy begin and end, what are the limits of copyright’s fair use doctrine, to what extent can free speech be controlled in the interest of other rights (such as privacy or the protection of minors) — are not new, nor even recent.
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (22.03.0, 2025-01-20).
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A much better way to manage Excel formulas
MICROSOFT 365
By Peter Deegan
Excel’s Advanced Formula Environment (AFE) is something that, once you get it, you will wonder how you lived without it.
AFE gives a Visual Studio–like view of a formula and named elements, which is so much better than the formula bar.
Even a simple formula can be hard to understand, especially if you didn’t write the formula in the first place.
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (22.03.0, 2025-01-20).
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Where did the rest of AI go?
AI
By Michael A. Covington
The term “artificial intelligence” goes back to the 1950s and defines a broad field.
The leading academic AI textbook, Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach by Stuart Russell and Peter Norvig — reportedly used at 1,500 colleges — mentions generative neural networks in only two of its 29 chapters.
Admittedly, that book dates from 2021; although it hasn’t been replaced, maybe it predates the revolution. Newer AI books are mostly about how to get results using off-the-shelf generative systems. Is it time for the rest of AI to die out? I don’t think so.
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (22.03.0, 2025-01-20).