Do you think I can't see you if you hide on the sofa? Hahaha

Play hide and seek with cute cats

u/Thin_Memory9983 — 4 days ago
▲ 3.5k r/nowmycat

I picked up a cat on the side of the road a few days ago, and I left it, right?

When I went to work a few days ago, I found a cat on the side of the road. Then it looked pitiful at the time, and I didn't care. But when I got off work, I saw it was still there. It had been standing still, and then I saw it was pitiful, so I bought it something to eat. Then after eating, it followed me, and I finally brought it home. Then it now knows how to sleep and eat in a day. I keep it, right?

u/Thin_Memory9983 — 5 days ago

How do you decide if an AI idea is too big?

I’m trying to get better at judging AI product ideas.

One mistake I notice in myself is that I often start too big. I think about platforms, agents, dashboards, and full workflows before I even understand the user’s actual problem.

Recently I’ve been trying to look for smaller things instead.

Not “what huge AI product can I build?”
More like “what annoying task do people already repeat every week?”

For example, someone might already use ChatGPT, but still spend a lot of time copying information, adjusting prompts, checking results, and moving the output somewhere else.

That seems less exciting than a big AI platform, but maybe it is easier to understand and validate.

How do you usually judge this?

When does an AI idea feel too broad, and when does it feel narrow enough to test?

reddit.com
u/Thin_Memory9983 — 22 days ago

NotebookLM feels like a better starting point for AI beginners than a blank chat box

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I looked through NotebookLM as a beginner-friendly AI workflow, and the use case feels clear: it helps people who have scattered source material but do not know what to ask AI.

Instead of starting with a blank chat box, the user can add PDFs, web pages, documents, public YouTube links, or notes into a notebook, then ask questions or generate study materials around those sources.

The part that seems most useful for beginners is not "AI does everything." It is that the AI has a smaller, source-based context to work from.

My cautious workflow would be:

  1. Add only non-sensitive material.

  2. Ask for the main points.

  3. Turn the material into questions or a study guide.

  4. Use Audio Overview if listening helps.

  5. Check important claims against the original source.

Question: for people teaching AI beginners, do you prefer starting from a tool like NotebookLM with user-provided sources, or from a general chatbot?

u/Thin_Memory9983 — 23 days ago

Thanks everyone for your concern about Xiaodou. She back to her lively self now

Thanks everyone for your concern about Xiaodou. She’s back to her lively self now and ate a lot this evening. I plan to take her out for a walk to cheer her up. After all, all furry friends love playing and yearn for freedom.

I’m truly grateful to all you kind animal lovers. This unexpected incident has also let me meet so many like-minded friends who adore small animals.

My family also includes a hamster and a cat besides Xiaodou. They get along really well, and I’ll introduce them to you all later

u/Thin_Memory9983 — 26 days ago

The puppy hasn't eaten or drunk anything all day. It looks even more glum than I am. What could be wrong with it?

It turns its nose up at dog food, regular meals and even water. It just sits there deep in thought, pondering the meaning of a dog's life. Does anyone know what's going on with it?

u/Thin_Memory9983 — 27 days ago