Think you know ChatGPT's custom GPTs? 🤔 Probably not. Last week, we tackled the basics and what's new with OpenAI's refreshed GPTs. For this AI Working Wednesdays episode, we're getting into some advanced techniques to hep you win back time. ↳ using the crazy powerful o3 model to your GPT's advantage ↳ context stacking ↳ custom actions to connect to third party sites Yeah.... don't sleep on this one shorties. Ep 563: ChatGPT's New Custom GPT's: Advanced techniques to win back time Newsletter: Sign up for our free daily newsletter More on this Episode: Episode Page Join the discussion: Thoughts on this? Join the convo and connect with other AI leaders on LinkedIn. Upcoming Episodes: Check out the upcoming Everyday AI Livestream lineup Website: YourEverydayAI.com Email The Show: info@youreverydayai.com Connect with Jordan on LinkedIn Topics Covered in This Episode: Custom GPTs: Advanced Techniques Overview OpenAI's Context Stacking Strategy O3 Model's Thinking Capabilities Building Efficient Custom GPTs Custom Actions and API Integration Zapier Integration for Dynamic Data ChatGPT's Context Window Management Creating Evergreen Podcast Content Timestamps: 00:00 Custom GPTs: Evolution and Insights 03:23 "Mastering GPT Context Stacking" 09:31 "Context Stacking in Chat GPT" 11:20 GPT Context Switching Advantage 15:33 Customizable GPT Usage Explained 19:51 Evergreen Episode Update Strategy 21:44 Optimizing AI for Continued Learning 23:48 "O-Series Models: Advanced AI Capabilities" 28:41 Building GPTs for Episode Research 30:03 GPT Model Customization and Sharing 33:18 Securing API Keys in GPTs 36:55 Zapier Enhances GPT Email Capabilities 42:12 "Use Chrome Extensions for Tokens" 43:48 "AI at Work Wednesdays Survey" Keywords: OpenAI's custom GPTs, advanced techniques, save time, context stacking, o three model, ChatGPT updates, logic and reasoning, plan ahead capabilities, agentic tools, custom actions, third party data, API, building GPTs, leveraging AI, context window, transformer model, generative AI, organization usage, fine tuning performance, productivity enhancement, AI agents, AI tools integration, custom configuration, everyday applications, tech strategies, new rendition, midweek break, AI experts, smarter AI usage, AI-powered planning, AI transformations. Ep 563: ChatGPT's New Custom GPT's: Advanced techniques to win back time Send Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info) Ready for ROI on GenAI? Go to youreverydayai.com/partner…
What if we’ve been doing the web wrong? What if, instead of mindlessly browsing, we could be thinking? What if, more than a mere collection of pages, the web could be our collective mind? Open Web Mind is a radical reinvention of the way we capture, explore and share our knowledge. Subscribe to stay in touch as it evolves.
What if we’ve been doing the web wrong? What if, instead of mindlessly browsing, we could be thinking? What if, more than a mere collection of pages, the web could be our collective mind? Open Web Mind is a radical reinvention of the way we capture, explore and share our knowledge. Subscribe to stay in touch as it evolves.
I’ve talked about edges in Open Web Mind, representing connections between nodes. But there’s a more precise way to represent connections in Open Web Mind. Hyperedges . Hyperedges are what make Open Web Mind a truly powerful way to capture human knowledge. They transform the knowledge graph into the knowledge hypergraph . — References: Node names and definitions from WordNet created by Princeton University licensed under WordNet 3.0 license — Hosted by Mark Jeffery founder of Open Web Mind I release the Open Web Mind podcast as a video too! Watch here . The full article is here . Kootenay Village Ventures Inc.…
I first imagined minds that might augment our own some three decades ago. Yes, I really am that old, and I have the grey hair to prove it. So why , three decades later , is it finally the right time for a mind for all humanity? Why now? Here are three reasons why the time is ripe for Open Web Mind: Reason #1: Search is dead Reason #2: Smash the system Reason #3: Seeing is believing — References: google.com Startpage – uses Google search YouTube Gmail Images weren’t introduced into HTML until 1995 ... ...several years after Tim Berners-Lee wrote the first specification in 1990 Google didn’t introduce image searches until 2001 ... ...prompted by Jennifer Lopez’s green Versace dress ... ...several years after WebCrawler launched the first true search engine in 1994 — Hosted by Mark Jeffery founder of Open Web Mind I release the Open Web Mind podcast as a video too! Watch here . The full article is here . Kootenay Village Ventures Inc.…
How do you think? Fire. The billions of neurons in your brain fire trillions of times a second. How do you think in Open Web Mind? Same answer. Fire. — References: There are billions of neurons in your brain. They fire trillions of times a second. There’s resting potential, threshold potential and action potential . Each neuron, if it fires, it communicates a signal to thousands of other neurons. Images: Political World & Political Africa from the CIA’s World Factbook public domain — Hosted by Mark Jeffery founder of Open Web Mind I release the Open Web Mind podcast as a video too! Watch here . The full article is here . Kootenay Village Ventures Inc.…
If you go to any web page, chances are you’ll find it’s written in the wrong language. It shouldn’t be written in English. Or Japanese. Or Arabic. The web shouldn’t be written in any language spoken by humans. It shouldn’t mimic the way we speak . It should mimic the way we think . — References: A hundred billion neurons are intricately interconnected in our brains A few tens of thousands of years ago , we evolved language A few thousand years ago , we invented writing A few decades ago , we invented the web Images: Skara2 via https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Skara2.jpg by Rob Farrow licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 Newgrange – Ireland via https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Newgrange_-_Ireland.jpg by Andrew Kearns licensed under CC BY 2.0 Reproduction cave of Altamira 01 by MatthiasKabel licensed under CC BY 2.5 Prehistoric Rock Paintings at Manda Guéli Cave in the Ennedi Mountains – northeastern Chad 2015 via https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Prehistoric_Rock_Paintings_at_Manda_Gu%C3%A9li_Cave_in_the_Ennedi_Mountains_-_northeastern_Chad_2015.jpg by David Stanley licensed under CC BY 2.0 Menhir du Pré du Devens à Saint-Aubin NE by Marc Juillard licensed under attribution license Merseburg, Kulturhistorisches Museum, Gefäße der Rössener Kultur-2 by Dguendel licensed under CC BY 4.0 Pilspets – Historiska museet – DIG 55462 via https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pilspets_- Historiska_museet -_DIG_55462.jpg by Ola Myrin licensed under CC BY 4.0 Stonehenge2007 07 30 via https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Stonehenge2007_07_30.jpgby garethwiscombe licensed under CC BY 2.0 Depictions and hieroglyphics – Sanctuary via https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Depictions_and_hieroglyphics_- Sanctuary (14284133120).jpg by Jorge Láscar licensed under CC BY 2.0 Chinese fishing nets, Cochin via https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Chinese_Fishing_Nets_Cochin.jpgby Brian Snelson licensed under CC BY 2.0 Salterio, xvi secolo, 02 iniziale D by Sailko licensed under CC BY 3.0 The Great wall via https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_Great_wall_-_by_Hao_Wei.jpg by Hao Wei licensed under CC BY 2.0 13-11-02-olb-by-RalfR-03 by Ralf Roletschek licensed under CC BY 3.0 The Difference Engine wheels via https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_Difference_Engine_wheels_(4376246859).jpgby Marcin Wichary licensed under CC BY 2.0 Hite Crossing Bridge HWY95 view2 MC by Christian Mehlführer licensed under CC BY 2.5 Physics Book via https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Physics_Book.jpg by basykes licensed under CC BY 2.0 “Ivy Mike” atmospheric nuclear test – November 1952 from The Official CTBTO Photostream public domain Endeavour via https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Shuttle_in_outer_space_by_NASA.jpgby prayitnophotography licensed under CC BY 2.0 Wikipedia articles on knowledge in English , Japanese and Arabic — Hosted by Mark Jeffery founder of Open Web Mind I release the Open Web Mind podcast as a video too! Watch here . The full article is here . Kootenay Village Ventures Inc.…
Why is it so hard to flow from one thing to another on the web? In our minds, we flow so easily from one motion to the next, one feeling to the next, one idea to the next. Why can’t it be like this when we’re on the web? Why can’t we flow as easily through our collective mind? Well, with Open Web Mind, we can . — Hosted by Mark Jeffery founder of Open Web Mind I release the Open Web Mind podcast as a video too! Watch here . The full article is here . Kootenay Village Ventures Inc.…
Far from killing Google, AI slots seamlessly into their business model. As long as we still go to Google when we want to know something, and as long as Google tells us what we want to know at least as well as OpenAI, and as long as we don’t care that Google’s balancing what we want to know with what people with influence and people with money want us to know, then it doesn’t matter how Google arrives at a particular response to a particular search, whether it’s through a three-decade-old PageRank algorithm or through the latest in AI. AI won’t kill Google. But what if something else came along that didn’t have to perform that tightrope walk between what we want to know and what Google wants us to know? What if that something else weren’t a search engine? It’s at the dawn of something completely different – completely unexpected – that the mighty fall. — References: chat.openai.com perplexity.ai gemini.google.com Google’s PageRank algorithm Sources: When Windows launched in 1985 , IBM was worth $30 billion . Now it’s worth $160 billion. When Netscape launched in 1994 , Microsoft was worth around $20 billion . Now it’s worth $3 trillion. When Instagram launched in 2010 , Facebook, too, was worth around $20 billion . Now it’s worth $1 trillion . When TikTok launched in 2016 , YouTube was worth maybe $100 billion . Now it’s worth maybe $400 billion . Google has been using AI to improve their search engine since 2001 . Admittedly, AI didn’t work its way to the core of the search engine, ranking results, until 2015 , but that was before OpenAI was born . Google pays Apple $20 billion a year so that when you want to know something on your iPhone, you go to Google. — Hosted by Mark Jeffery founder of Open Web Mind I release the Open Web Mind podcast as a video too! Watch here . The full article is here . Kootenay Village Ventures Inc.…
Open Web Mind captures a core characteristic of mind, that some connections between ideas are stronger than others, by ranking these connections. So how does Open Web Mind decide these rankings? This question of how to rank edges in Open Web Mind will take us to the even deeper question of how we make connections in our minds. — Sources: List of ISO 3166 country codes from the International Organization for Standardization List of land boundaries from the CIA’s World Factbook Wikipedia article on India Other Wikipedia articles: Campanology Tulip mania The match between Coventry City and Bristol City in 1977 Reference: In the human brain, the more often a pathway between neurons is activated, the stronger that pathway becomes , which makes it more likely to be activated in the future Permission: Wikipedia content licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 — Hosted by Mark Jeffery founder of Open Web Mind I release the Open Web Mind podcast as a video too! Watch here . The full article is here . Kootenay Village Ventures Inc.…
You know how some connections in your mind are stronger than others? Every time you think of summer, you think of ice cream. Every time you’re asked to think of an animal, your mind goes to an elephant, never a bat, or a penguin, or an octopus. Every time you think of Uncle Mike, you immediately think of that time in Marrakesh when... well, you know the story. How does Open Web Mind capture this core characteristic of mind, that some connections are stronger than others? You might think the answer’s obvious. We simply assign a strength to each connection, right? Wrong. It turns out that assigning a strength to each connection won’t work. Here’s what will . — Hosted by Mark Jeffery founder of Open Web Mind I release the Open Web Mind podcast as a video too! Watch here . The full article is here . Kootenay Village Ventures Inc.…
Remember when the web was open? No? Well, I’m not surprised. It’s a long time since the web was the open medium we were promised. Who closed the web? You might be surprised at some of the culprits... ...and at how close we might be to breaking the web open again. — You can’t do much on the web these days without giving your real name, your social security number, your driver’s licence and your fingerprints, without some shadowy mechanism dictating what you can and can’t say and see, without some nameless functionary nudging you away from what you want to do towards what they want you to do. How did this happen? When the web was invented, it promised open connection between every person on the planet. Who broke this promise? Here are the four forces that have worked to close the web... ...and how Open Web Mind will open it right back up again. — References: Companies like The New York Times, Barnes & Noble, eBay and Amazon, not to mention little known phone companies, health companies, travel companies and even florists, were willing to pay AOL and CompuServe hundreds of millions of dollars to bring their content inside the walls of their gardens. The FBI directed Twitter to censor certain ideas , certain stories and certain people . In some countries, politicians fund independent media, too, paying journalists a substantial portion of their salaries. In some countries, politicians pass clumsy legislation dictating what tech companies can and can’t show us in our feeds. Governments can, at a whim, hit tech companies with massive fines for arcane transgressions, force them to fund local media, and strangle them with antitrust lawsuits . We need to be eternally vigilant . — Hosted by Mark Jeffery founder of Open Web Mind I release the Open Web Mind podcast as a video too! Watch here . The full article is here . Kootenay Village Ventures Inc.…
Open Web Mind is a squillion nodes... connected by edges . So what is an edge in Open Web Mind? Here’s a clue: I just told you everything you need to know about edges. Well... almost everything. In Open Web Mind, just as a node can represent anything , an edge can represent any connection between nodes. — Hosted by Mark Jeffery founder of Open Web Mind I release the Open Web Mind podcast as a video too! Watch here . The full article is here . Kootenay Village Ventures Inc.…
At its core, Open Web Mind is a squillion nodes. So, you might be wondering, what exactly is a node in Open Web Mind? Here’s the answer to that question in one word : Anything . In Open Web Mind, a node can represent any thing . — Wikipedia notability guidelines — Hosted by Mark Jeffery founder of Open Web Mind I release Open Web Mind as a video too! Watch this episode here . The full article is here . Kootenay Village Ventures Inc.…
Open Web Mind is a radical reinvention of the way we capture, explore and share our knowledge. Here, in seven words, is the essence of Open Web Mind. — Hosted by Mark Jeffery founder of Open Web Mind I release Open Web Mind video too! Watch here . The full article is here . Kootenay Village Ventures Inc.…
What if we've been doing the web wrong? What if, instead of mindlessly browsing , we could be thinking ? What if, more than a mere collection of pages, the web could be our collective mind ? Open Web Mind is a radical reinvention of the way we capture, explore and share our knowledge. Welcome to humanity's mind. — Hosted by Mark Jeffery , founder of Open Web Mind I release The Last Theory as a video too! Watch here . The full article is here . Kootenay Village Ventures Inc.…
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