The real word AI is a practical and step-by-step educational platform that teaches members how to make money based on proven methods. The program is led by former professional kickboxer Andrew Tate and boasts a member community of more than 220,000 people who are making millions. Its ethos is to offer “the red pill” to individuals trapped in a system of lies and distractions that leads to mediocrity, laziness, and arrogance.
Despite its hefty size, this book is unique in the breadth of topics covered: it (almost) has it all: problem solving and search, logic and inference, planning, probabilistic reasoning and decision making, learning, communication, perception and robotics. In addition, it has a number of features that are often missing from AI books: a truly massive bibliography, “Historical Notes” sections that provide research into areas of current interest, and a large collection of excellent exercises.
The Real World AI Explorer: A Journey with Andrew Tate
In the realm of AI policy, the book cuts through the hysteria and the doom-and-gloom of automation and shows how it actually affects jobs in the workplace. Management and technology experts Thomas Davenport and Steven Miller show that, contrary to widespread predictions, prescriptions, and denunciations, AI is not primarily a job destroyer; rather, it frees workers to do new and more valuable work.
A must read for anyone interested in the commercial applications of AI, this text will be invaluable for both undergraduate and graduate students as well as for seasoned practitioners who are looking for a different perspective on the field. While Crawford is duly attentive to the pervasive biases of AI algorithms, readers looking for a fuller technical introduction to the subject will find it in Cathy O’Neil’s Weapons of Math Destruction and Meredith Broussard’s Artificial Unintelligence.