A brief guide to ππ ππ¨π
To celebrate writing on the internet for a year, I added some navigation. In addition to the typical substack βarchiveβ and βaboutβ links, you will now find these links on the navigation bar:
William James links to long-form essays using the ideas of William James to explore the social and historical contexts of generative AI.
AI Log teaches links to a page with reports about experiments using an LLM as a group brainstorming and collaboration tool in my history class.
The Log links to my ongoing series of essays exploring the social contexts and educational value of generative AI. These range from hot takes on new stories to book reviews to arguments about how to use or understand generative AI. I publish about two essays a month.
The Logroll is not yet available. It will be a regularly updated guide to writing on the internet that I enjoy, admire, or find useful. Given my current priorities are to finish another James essay and teach, this may not arrive until winter break.
If you are interested in learning more about what I am trying to accomplish by writing on the internet, here are three pieces about what and why I write.
The ππ Log is a story about the history behind the name of this blog.
Welcome to AI Log starts with a brief overview and degenerates into to jokes and commentary about writing on the internet.
The AI Log Rolls On explains why I shifted from writing weekly to longer-form essays and describes ideas that are important to my writing.