A busy weekend
I’m sorry for writing this diary late. I was supposed to do it yesterday, but the practical training report for my logistics class took up all my time. When I got home, it was already 8 pm, so I just took a shower and went to sleep.
I woke up at 10 am today. I didn’t have lunch because I wasn’t hungry. In the afternoon, I spent three hours finishing the report on logistics information technology. It wasn’t a required course, but the teacher had high standards. She required us to search at least 15 papers in Chinese and 5 papers in English. This homework was as demanding as a formal paper.
Luckily, I used Perplexity (an AI assistant) to help me. It can generate good articles, but they are often superficial. So, I used another AI called DeepSeek, developed by a Chinese tech company, to optimize the draft written by Perplexity. It helped me add more depth.
You might think it’s immoral to use AI for homework instead of doing it myself. But I believe many college courses are poorly designed. The school probably created useless courses just to improve employment rates, without caring about students’ learning. Similarly, some parents only care if their children attend school, not what they learn.
Anyway, I finished that useless course and am confident I’ll get a high score. Let’s change the topic. Today, I read an article about the AI race. It mentioned that Anthropic is winning in enterprise AI. Over the past year, Anthropic has signed huge deals with governments and companies to promote their model, Claude, as a leading enterprise service.
It’s very interesting! Did you know that Anthropic recently banned users from China from accessing their AI services? Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic, said China is a dangerous country. People speculate that Dario might have been influenced by his past experience at Baidu, but we don’t know the truth unless he explains it himself.
Finally, the article also mentioned that Google plans to send GPUs to space. I think Sundar Pichai, Google’s CEO, is crazy! This idea has challenges, but Sundar believes these issues will be at least partially solved within a decade.
That’s all for today. Thanks for reading!
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