{"id":255,"date":"2026-05-29T11:06:46","date_gmt":"2026-05-29T11:06:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/cityrelocationnews.com\/?p=255"},"modified":"2026-05-29T11:06:46","modified_gmt":"2026-05-29T11:06:46","slug":"should-you-automate-your-life","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/cityrelocationnews.com\/?p=255","title":{"rendered":"Should You Automate Your Life?"},"content":{"rendered":"<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div><span><em>You\u2019re reading <strong>Open Questions<\/strong>, Joshua Rothman\u2019s weekly column exploring what it means to be human.<\/em><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>\u201cI, Joanna Stern, do solemnly swear to live with the machines for the next 365 days.\u201d Thus begins the year-long experiment chronicled in Stern\u2019s book, \u201cI Am Not a Robot,\u201d a romp through the landscape of applied artificial intelligence, published this month. Early in 2025, Stern, a former technology reporter for the <em>Wall Street Journal<\/em>, decided to \u201ccram artificial intelligence into as many corners\u201d of her life as possible. In the course of a year, she used more than a hundred A.I.-based products, including glasses, bracelets, cars, robots, and a toothbrush. She talked with an A.I. therapist; replaced her research assistant with an A.I. agent; opened her marriage to an A.I. boyfriend; and let an A.I. draft bedtime stories for her kids. The project was, she writes, \u201can honest attempt to see what happens when AI and intelligent machines become part of everything.\u201d Smartphones have done it; A.I. is next.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/cityrelocationnews.com\/?p=253\">Inside Lebanon\u2019s Fraught Push to Disarm Hezbollah<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Stern is exactly the sort of writer you want to read on the question of how useful A.I. can be in real life. She\u2019s made a career out of being a normal person who knows a lot about technology but never gets carried away by sci-fi fantasies. Instead, she prioritizes everyday reality. On YouTube, it\u2019s easy to find videos in which recent college grads explain how they\u2019ve automated their whole lives with A.I.; in a sense, this is easy for them, since their routines and careers haven\u2019t been built yet. Stern is forty-one, with a wife and two kids, and she\u2019s fully immersed in a career at which she\u2019s extraordinarily competent. Like many people in midlife, she already knows how to do what she needs to do. You, similarly, may consider your prodigious skills, honed through untold hours of real-world training, and wonder how an A.I. could possibly aid you. If you can already read, write, and thrive, at home and at work\u2014and if you don\u2019t need to code, make a website, or create generative art\u2014then \u201cliving with the machines\u201d can seem more like a burden than a boon.<\/p>\n<div><\/div>\n<p>Predictably, Stern finds that adopting A.I. aggressively can be a form of self-sabotage. Her wife texts, asking her to help make lunch for the kids; \u201cSorry, I have other plans,\u201d Stern\u2019s A.I. responds. (\u201cWTF,\u201d her wife replies.) When Stern asks a chatbot for advice about a haircut, it recommends a fashionable bob while also providing a preview image in which her features have been subtly altered to make the haircut appear more flattering. (Her hairdresser tells her the cut wouldn\u2019t work: \u201cAlways listen to the woman holding the scissors,\u201d Stern concludes.)<\/p>\n<p>Even when A.I. tools function well, they can come at a cost\u2014a cost that is calculable for Stern only because she has previously done the tasks herself. When an agent orders her son\u2019s school supplies automatically, Stern realizes that she misses the annual ritual of choosing pens and folders. After she dispatches an avatar of herself, trained by the company Otter.ai to mimic her vocal and intellectual style, to interview sources over Zoom, she is \u201cblown away\u201d by its ability to ask genuinely perceptive questions\u2014and yet she\u2019s experienced enough to see the risks inherent in sitting out the most enjoyable and inspiring part of her job. It\u2019s during such interviews that connections are made and \u201cideas are born.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p>\u201cI Am Not a Robot\u201d looks, superficially, like an attempt to assess the value of A.I.\u2014a doomed endeavor, since the technology is always improving. (\u201cOne of the biggest obstacles I faced was that the tech kept getting better faster than I could test or write,\u201d she notes.) On a deeper level, though, the book is a performance in which Stern models the process of deciding whether different kinds of A.I. are good for her, as an individual. She notes that she wrote all of \u201cI Am Not a Robot\u201d herself (the words \u201cstarted in my brain and traveled, via my MacBook keyboard, onto the page\u201d), yet she also employed \u201cBookBots\u201d: custom A.I. agents she built using ChatGPT and Claude. These bots, she explains, had access to her outlines and transcripts, and throughout the writing process they \u201cresearched, summarized papers, crunched data, copyedited sections, suggested better words, brainstormed, and even mocked-up illustration ideas.\u201d (When the book was finished, they wrote the blurbs: \u201c\u00a0\u2018I Am Not a Robot\u2019 is unusually self-aware,\u201d ChatGPT observed.) Stern questions whether using the BookBots was a good idea. Did having them \u201cconstantly edit and tighten my writing cost me the version of this book that might have resulted from the slower, more reflective process of figuring out what I actually wanted to say?\u201d She doesn\u2019t really arrive at an answer, perhaps because whatever insight she found wouldn\u2019t necessarily apply to anyone else. A.I. is everywhere, but it\u2019s not a one-size-fits-all technology. It\u2019s something you have to try for yourself, on your own problems, drawing your own conclusions.<\/p>\n<p>Talking to college students over the past few months, I\u2019ve been struck by the terrible bind they\u2019re in when it comes to A.I. On the one hand, it seems obvious that they need to learn how to use the technology, to keep up with the competition and to prepare for the future. On the other, by employing A.I., they may end up cheating both their professors and themselves. Commentators outside the classroom seem to hold extreme views (A.I. is the future; A.I. is wrong), but they aren\u2019t about to enter the job market for the first time. \u201cShould we use it, or not?\u201d some students asked me, recently. I basically said no\u2014but maybe yes, carefully, a little?<\/p>\n<p>Many people are living through versions of this dilemma in their own contexts. At work, it certainly seems wise to acquaint yourself with the tools that are changing your job and your field. But can you do so without losing your skills, and without being accused of faking, cheating, or shirking? In our personal lives, many of us are dependent on smartphones and social media, which we\u2019ve spent decades decrying as oppressive and manipulative. But if we explore A.I.-based alternatives (by using the technology to summarize our e-mails, say) are we engaging in behavior that is in some way antihuman? Some argue for a total rejection of A.I. at work, in art, at school, and at home, while others rush to employ it everywhere. But the views expressed on both sides might not apply to you, in particular, because each of us has different goals, contexts, and competencies.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/cityrelocationnews.com\/?p=251\">Donald Trump Gets Even<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Stern\u2019s book underscores the insufficiencies of \u201cA.I.\u201d as an umbrella term. When she goes for a mammogram, her doctor shows her how A.I.-based diagnostic tools have already improved her radiology practice: the software, she explains, has meaningfully increased accuracy, helped prioritize the most complex cases, and even boosted morale, by showing overworked radiologists how often they\u2019re correct. And yet, at various dentists\u2019 offices, Stern finds dentists who are \u201cusing AI to upsell the crap out of us\u201d by employing tools that claim to identify incipient cavities worthy of early intervention. (\u201cSomething like this I wouldn\u2019t even treat,\u201d a more conscientious dentist says of an issue flagged by an A.I. \u201cIt\u2019s not worth putting a hole in your tooth to fill just to get a cavity of that size.\u201d) \u201cTechnology that reassures in oncology can feel manipulative in dentistry,\u201d Stern writes, because those fields are fundamentally different. Dentistry is rife with judgment calls based on preferences, while oncology isn\u2019t.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p>So much depends on where A.I. tools are used, and in what spirit. This means that, in many cases, whether A.I. is \u201cgood\u201d or \u201cbad\u201d depends on you. Stern spends most of the year wearing Amazon\u2019s Bee bracelet, a little wrist-based gizmo that transcribes everything it hears and then lets you ask questions about the transcripts. The technology is creepy: Stern has to remember to turn the bracelet off before she has sensitive conversations, and her friends and colleagues sometimes ask her to do so. She finds unappealing moments in the transcripts, \u201clike the time I snapped at one of the kids,\u201d and notes the problems with becoming \u201ca walking data-collection experiment.\u201d And yet it\u2019s useful to be able to look back on exactly what the plumber said when he identified the source of the leak. The bracelet\u2019s software summarizes what happens, serving as a kind of diary, and Stern ends the book with an entry about a November day when she worked on her book, packed lunches, and found her son\u2019s lost whistle. Is the Bee bracelet a good idea? Maybe the answer has to do with how reliable your memory is. What about Meta\u2019s A.I.-enabled smart glasses, which have raised questions about privacy and surveillance? In a recent thread on Bluesky, the writer Sarah Rose, who is legally blind, described them as \u201cabsolute game changers for the blind community.\u201d It is \u201cincredible,\u201d she wrote, \u201cto talk to your glasses and ask them what they see.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>As a journalist who covers artificial intelligence, I\u2019ve been fascinated by the ups and downs in our collective response to it. For a while, people said it wasn\u2019t that smart. Then they said it was so smart it would take over the world. Then they said it was a bubble\u2014which it might be\u2014that would soon burst, as the dot-com bubble did. At various times, when new versions of Claude or ChatGPT felt disappointing, observers argued that A.I. had hit a wall; at other times, other observers said it had made great strides. Earlier this year, when Anthropic and the Department of Defense fought over the development of military A.I., the scariest, most \u201cTerminator\u201d-esque predictions seemed salient again. Meanwhile, month by month, the technology continued to improve, and those who used it continued to get better at doing so. Many of the earliest, broadest claims about the stupidity of A.I. now seem hard to sustain.<\/p>\n<p>Where are we now? Journalists and technologists have been rushing to respond to \u201cMagnifica Humanitas,\u201d the Pope\u2019s encyclical about artificial intelligence, which appeared this week. Perhaps because I wasn\u2019t expecting the Pope to break new ground on questions of A.I. safety, my main reaction was simply to step back and take in the big picture. The Pope had written about artificial intelligence, a field that, just a couple of decades ago, was widely regarded as moribund. (Many researchers then preferred to say that they worked on \u201cmachine learning\u201d or \u201ccomputer vision.\u201d) The details of the encyclical were interesting, but on some level they didn\u2019t matter: \u201cThe Pope is basically telling us that AI is here to stay,\u201d the economist Tyler Cowen wrote.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p>That doesn\u2019t mean that it\u2019s time to start \u201cliving with the machines\u201d and automating every aspect of your life. But it might indicate that it\u2019s time to begin the more specific work of figuring out, in a conscious and considered way, where artificial intelligence might help and hurt you, in all your particularity. If those students were to ask me their question again, I\u2019d answer differently. I\u2019d say, use it, definitely\u2014but use it seriously. Be open about it. And keep track, in different contexts, of what you\u2019re gaining and giving up. Make a list. Take notes. \u2666<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/cityrelocationnews.com\/?p=246\">Taking Children from Their Parents Without a Court Order<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Joshua Rothman on the book \u201cI Am Not a Robot: My Year Using AI to Do (Almost) Everything,\u201d by Joanna Stern.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":254,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[21],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-255","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-open-questions"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.6 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Should You Automate Your Life? - City Relocation News<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/cityrelocationnews.com\/?p=255\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Should You Automate Your Life? 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