From Sceptic to Subscriber: Beginning of My AI Story

I can’t believe I’m only now really starting to talk about some AI stuff, and ChatGPT launched in November 2022.

Looking back, I really didn’t do very much with it for over a year. The first six months was kind of like, okay, that’s cool, fine. I did a lot of reading about it separately, but I really didn’t do a heck of a lot until February 2024.

So over a year later, things were mature enough that I decided to take the plunge and try one of the paid services. Through the summer of 2023 I was definitely doing things here and there, but I was sceptical on what it could do. I was sceptical on its privacy. Well, I’m still sceptical on its privacy. But I didn’t pay for anything, and I was what you’d consider a light, casual user.

February 2024, I upgraded to Copilot. I also upgraded the family to the Microsoft 365 family plan at the same time, which you kind of need for Copilot Pro, or don’t, I forget. But there was a reason I did both at the same time. I treated it like a trial. Paid for it, but gave myself 30 days to see if I’d actually use it.

And I liked it. But the main reason I’d gone with Copilot was for the Microsoft Office integrations. That’s what sold me on it for personal use. In practice though, they just didn’t meet expectations at the time. And once I started talking to friends about it, the logic became pretty clear. Copilot is powered by ChatGPT anyway, and ChatGPT at the time had more plugins and a lot more flexibility. So why was I paying for the middleman?

I only used Copilot for about a month before switching to ChatGPT in March 2024.

I started using that on and off. In the beginning I’m not sure I really got my money’s worth, but it was worthwhile to have something and actually use it. I was able to use it for things like tutoring the kids — there’s literally a way to set it up so it won’t just give them the answer, it walks them through the problem. Stuff like that. A whole bunch of different use cases.

But what became apparent straight away was that there were things I was very hesitant to do with it, because it was, and still is, unclear what they actually do with your data.

For context I ran this story through an AI image generator to get a banner for this entry and after 3 tries it came up with what I used.

All I Want Is A Dumb TV

We got a new television back in October 2022. As much as I try to stay up on the trends in technology, purchasing televisions has always made me apprehensive. When I bought the television in our living room nine years ago, I remember spending a lot of time researching and still not being 100% sure what I was getting was just right. The time before that, when I got my first LCD TV, was just as stressful. There are so many features that I really don’t know if having them matters. Even when reviewers say you need 240 Hz or whatever is the thing to get, I question whether it’s really worth the extra money when M doesn’t really care and my eyes aren’t exactly perfect anyway. I digress. I just want to talk about one bell and whistle in TVs today that you cannot avoid: the smart in smart TVs.

When I bought my last television in 2013, it was pretty hard, if not impossible, to get a decent TV without smart software. I didn’t like it then. I only used the Wi-Fi on our other television a few times to update firmware. That turned out to be a great decision on my part. The Vizio TV we had was one of the models where they were caught up spying on their customers. I forget exactly what they were doing, but I think it was either using the microphone to listen in or to see what advertisements people were interacting with. Either way, it was creepy and illegal. It didn’t impact me since my Wi-Fi on the TV was off, so there was no way for the TV to communicate with the vendor.

When I received our new TV, the folks from John Lewis went to set it up for me (it was part of the deal of mounting it on the wall). They asked what my Wi-Fi details were. I told them they didn’t need to do anything and that the television would never join my Wi-Fi network. It turns out, however, that I was incorrect. I tried to keep the television off the Wi-Fi network, but if I did that, I got a warning that remained on the screen until I connected it to the Wi-Fi. I guess the TV was smarter than I thought! 😂

Full disclosure I took the original complete blog entry I wrote previously and ran it through Microsoft Copilot, because why not. The results were not far from what I wrote but just better enough that for fun I am posting it!