JadeVlog

How to Use the GPT-3 Chatbot

The OpenAI Playground lets you ask an AI bot to write nearly anything for you. You can ask the AI questions, start a conversation with it, use it to write short stories, and more. To use the Playground AI, you'll need to make an account on OpenAI's website. Advertisement The internet is filled with fun artificial intelligence tools, and the research lab OpenAI is behind a lot of them. OpenAI is responsible for everything from DALL-E, the AI tool that can produce detailed art with a simple prompt, to ChatGPT, the AI bot that can answer questions, have conversations, and even write basic code for developers.

James Brown obituary | Soul

SoulObituaryJames Brown obituaryGodfather of Soul who became a spokesman for black AmericaStocky but lithe, like a street-brawling puma, James Brown, who has died aged 73 of congestive heart failure, was a dominant force in the emancipation of African-American music and culture from the 1960s onwards. He was still performing up to his death. The day before he was hospitalised for pneumonia, he was at his annual Christmas toy giveaway in Atlanta, Georgia, and looking forward to giving a New Year's Eve concert.

Sanctuary city San Francisco is fueling property boom in HONDURAS

A small farming community north of Honduras' capital city Tegucigalpa is undergoing a construction boom thanks to large influxes of cash from San Francisco - where many of the local young men have set up a thriving drug market. The town of El Pedernal is now flush with gaudy mansions emblazoned with the San Francisco 49ers logo, and homages to the California city's iconic Golden Gate Bridge. One photo seen by DailyMail.

Sex, Drugs and Rock 'N' Roll: Clapton After 'Cocaine'

Hear Classic Clapton 'Layla' Toggle more options Embed Embed <iframe src="https://www.npr.org/player/embed/15412830/15397163" width="100%" height="290" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" title="NPR embedded audio player"> 'Wonderful Tonight' Toggle more options Embed Embed <iframe src="https://www.npr.org/player/embed/15412830/15397111" width="100%" height="290" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" title="NPR embedded audio player"> Part 1 Second of a two-part interview. In 1977, Eric Clapton released a version of the J.J. Cale song "Cocaine." At the time, Clapton was consuming copious amounts of cocaine — and alcohol — and had only recently kicked a heroin habit.