Spoke with my very smart nephew about AI. He has played with the Chinese Deep Seek, as well as other similar programs. He states that DS is very different and interesting.
As I'm 'curious' about that world, I'm considering buying an inexpensive Chromebook to contain playing with these programs with a designated computer. The linkage exception is the use of the same Wi-Fi router.
Two questions: Have any of you fiddled around with the AI programs; and any suggestions about Chromebooks and limitations of functions? The cheapest I find right now are less than $300.
Did I miss something about this subject?
Thank you.
Catch
Comments
Thanks much- OJ
Heck, I have high-end Mac desktops and laptops and even they struggle with some of the larger models I might load into an "AI client" -- some of them my AI tools won't even *load* because they know the requirements are too much!
(Your wifi router shouldn't matter.)
* use a different browser than your regular one, if you're feeling particularly paranoid.
This one is $18,000 - https://www.newegg.com/asus-rog-astral-rog-astral-rtx5090-o32g-dhahab-edition-geforce-rtx-5090-32gb-video-cards-triple-fans/p/1FT-000Y-00BZ2?Item=9SIBP4YKG01985
But hey, Free returns!
I'm not a gamer which has helped to reduce spending on performance GPUs over the years.
https://www.barrons.com/articles/chatgpt-gemini-grok-claude-ranked-how-to-use-fb05b409?st=XdNW6D&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
I re-read my initial post. I should have taken a nap before writing, as it lacks clarity.
I don't want to download and run the program. I want to only ask questions. My nephew has the 'app' on a smartphone. He visits the site for a 'questions only' of the site.
This was the intent about using a Chromebook only for this purpose. No site visits from the main laptop at home.
I had a great 'how to text' page that I deleted. But, there are a lot of videos and related.
I'll do some more digging.
Lastly, our daughter has a serious gaming desktop she stopped using. Maybe I'll grab that.
Thanks to all for the notes. Add more when the thought comes about.
Catch
And Dr, my background is also tech. The knowledge base was ever changing, but wouldn't have changed much with the career.
On the other hand many - probably far wealthier than I - do seem to use AI successfully. And I’ve yet to hear of AI exceeding the bounds of propriety. (Like letting a carpet installer enter your home when you’re not around). So my fears would seem overblown. I like @Catch22’s thinking as much as I can follow it. Sounds like he wants to play with AI on a device not linked to his personal information.
BTW - Bing (owned by Microsoft) used to allow anyone who did a search use AI in some fashion. And the results, even two years ago, were stunning. Lately I’ve found it hard to get that sort of free ride. They want you to have an account with them with the personal disclosures such accounts demand..
If you REALLY want to be freaked out, forget about AI. Go look up the new built-in 'Microsoft Recall' and think of all the places (doctors, schools, drug stores, insurance companies, brokerages, etc) that use Microsoft Windows where your data may get slurped off of remote systems in the name of efficiency and backup (and AI).
With the exceptions of all one can do may do today (Youtube, etc.,etc.) I think I had as much fun with Windows XP, Service Pack 2 cruising the internet.