TL;DR: Applied Artificial Intelligence (AAI)
Overlogix leverages applied Artificial Intelligence to support business automation, practical database and software engineering, data security and best practices in the use of technology to enhance online business. This series of brief articles on topics related to automation and artificial intelligence is in part written by Chatty (ChatGPT 3.5).
Chatty did not write this fast overview of applied artificial intelligence, we did.
Our complete index of articles chronicles the rapidly emerging technologies fueling the artificial intelligence revolution. We published a brief, rapid mini-wiki on many AI concepts and terms for a concise overview of the main, important topics, as well as an artificial intelligence glossary for the genuinely busy.
Applied Artificial Intelligence (AAI) refers to the business, organizational, personal or research use of AI as an ongoing aid to solve real world or research problems. For example, Overlogix uses AI as a computer programming aid, much of which is detailed in the series of articles Building Our Own Robot and The Gospel According to ChatGPT.
From a practical point of view, applied AI means taking an existing, reasonably behaved AI model, and re-training it to competently handle a particular range of tasks. The technical term for re-training is "fine-tuning", almost certainly a misnomer.
This quite formidable task might result in marketable, special-purpose AIs in the future, and is one of the specific technical goals of our company. Examples of such task ranges include Python programming, C++ programming, SQL generation, and any other similarly limited range our customers might need.
Industries, including architecture, computing, engineering, graphics, high technology, journalism, manufacturing, media, medicine, research, science and (low) technology increasingly use AI as an assistant, and on many occasions, as a creative aid. The use of AI is exploding, and touches nearly everyone today.
If you enjoyed this article, a thumbs up helps us with the robot. Comments are always welcome and encouraged. Every little bit helps! Our series, Building Our Own Robot, details our path to AI assisted, large-scale automation.