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Another Crazy Day in AI: An Almost Daily Newsletter

Hello, AI Enthusiasts.


As the workday fades, the research keeps rolling in.


Researchers from Duke, Harvard, and OpenAI—through a nonprofit research group—have traced how ChatGPT went from zero to 10% of the world’s adults in less than three years. Beyond the numbers, the study tracks the habits of everyday users turning AI into a daily tool.


Meanwhile, Google is pitching 10 AI “Gold Standards” meant to help emerging economies build their own AI-ready ecosystems.


And YouTube is sharpening its Studio with tools that brainstorm, fact-check, and even lip-sync!


Here's another crazy day in AI:

  • The many uses of ChatGPT

  • AI policy gold standards for emerging economies

  • AI-powered updates in YouTube Studio

  • Some AI tools to try out


TODAY'S FEATURED ITEM: Inside Three Years of ChatGPT Data


A robotic scientist in a classic white coat with 'AI Scientist' on its back stands beside a human scientist with 'Human Scientist' on their coat, looking towards the AI Scientist.

Image Credit: Wowza (created with Ideogram)


What does it really mean when 10% of the world's adults have adopted a technology that didn't exist three years ago?



A new research paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research finally pulls back the curtain on ChatGPT usage patterns, analyzing conversations from launch in November 2022 through July 2025. Written by Aaron Chatterji, Thomas Cunningham, David J. Deming, Zoe Hitzig, Christopher Ong, Carl Yan Shan, and Kevin Wadman—researchers from Duke University, Harvard University, and OpenAI—the study used privacy-preserving methods to examine how this technology spread to roughly 10% of the world's adult population in less than three years. Beyond the numbers, the research offers one of the first systematic looks at how people are actually using conversational systems in their daily and professional lives.



How People Use ChatGPT, September 2025, Working Paper 34255, DOI 10.3386/w34255
How People Use ChatGPT, September 2025, Working Paper 34255, DOI 10.3386/w34255


The researchers highlighted several patterns:

  • Early adoption leaned male, but usage has since balanced out.

  • Growth has been strong in lower-income countries, not just high-income ones.

  • Non-work usage now makes up more than 70% of conversations.

  • Work-related use is most common among those with higher education and professional jobs.

  • The most frequent categories are Practical Guidance, Seeking Information, and Writing—together nearly 80% of all conversations.

  • Writing dominates workplace use, while programming and creative expression account for smaller shares.

  • Decision support tasks are particularly common in knowledge-based roles.


How People Use ChatGPT, September 2025, Working Paper 34255, DOI 10.3386/w34255
How People Use ChatGPT, September 2025, Working Paper 34255, DOI 10.3386/w34255


This research offers a window into something we rarely get to examine closely: how people actually integrate new technology into their lives once the initial excitement settles. The patterns that emerged don't always match what we might expect. People gravitated toward practical applications rather than experimental ones, and they found ways to use ChatGPT for everyday problems that require thinking through options or organizing complex information.


The geographic distribution particularly challenges conventional wisdom about technology adoption. When barriers to access are lowered, developing countries can move faster than established markets, suggesting that utility often trumps economic factors in driving uptake. The predominance of personal over professional use also tells us something important about human needs. While workplace applications get significant attention, people discovered value in having a conversational partner for personal decisions, learning, and problem-solving outside their professional roles.


Perhaps most significantly, the study documents how a sophisticated technology found its place not by revolutionizing how people work or think, but by augmenting existing processes in subtle ways. The concentration of professional benefits among educated workers raises important questions about who gains access to productivity improvements, while the global spread suggests these tools can provide value across different economic circumstances. As more conversational systems enter the market, understanding these baseline usage patterns becomes crucial for anticipating how such technologies might develop and what effects they might have on different communities and economic sectors.



Read the full paper here.

OTHER INTERESTING AI HIGHLIGHTS:


AI Policy Gold Standards for Emerging Economies

/Eunice Huang (Head of AI and Emerging Tech Policy, Google Asia Pacific), and Shimon Shmooely (Head of Public Affairs and AI Policy, Emerging Markets), on Google Blogs – The Keyword


Google has released 10 AI Policy Gold Standards aimed at helping emerging economies unlock the potential of artificial intelligence. Building on the 2024 AI Sprinters Framework, the roadmap outlines how governments can build AI-ready ecosystems, enable broad adoption, and establish supportive regulations. The standards cover critical areas such as cloud infrastructure, open datasets, AI skills training, copyright frameworks, and international standards alignment. The goal: ensure AI drives inclusive growth, safeguards privacy, and strengthens development worldwide.



Read more here.


AI-Powered Updates in YouTube Studio

/Amjad Hanif (Vice President of Creator Products), on YouTube Official Blog


YouTube unveiled new Studio updates designed to act as a creative partner for creators at every stage of their journey. Key features include Ask Studio, an AI-powered conversational tool for insights and inspiration; an expanded Inspiration tab to spark fresh video ideas; and new A/B testing options for titles and thumbnails. The updates also bring auto dubbing with lip sync, enhanced collaboration tools, and expanded likeness detection for protecting creators’ identities. Together, these tools reflect YouTube’s push to make content creation smarter, safer, and more collaborative.



Read more here.

SOME AI TOOLS TO TRY OUT:


  • Imini – AI super agent for research, drafting, slides, and multimedia creation.

  • Slashit – Create reusable text templates and hotkeys to cut repetitive writing.

  • Structify – Clean messy data and build no-code automations on demand.

That’s a wrap on today’s Almost Daily craziness.


Catch us almost every day—almost! 😉

EXCITING NEWS:

The Another Crazy Day in AI newsletter is on LinkedIn!!!



Wowza, Inc.

Leveraging AI for Enhanced Content: As part of our commitment to exploring new technologies, we used AI to help curate and refine our newsletters. This enriches our content and keeps us at the forefront of digital innovation, ensuring you stay informed with the latest trends and developments.





Another Crazy Day in AI: An Almost Daily Newsletter

Hello, AI Enthusiasts.


Nearing the weekend means catching up on what matters in AI.


In a new podcast, school leaders from Oregon talk candidly about bringing AI into classrooms and the pushback that comes with it. Parents’ concerns about screen time, distraction, and overreliance collide with the reality that digital literacy is now part of preparing kids for the world they already live in.


Meanwhile, Uber is making noise about Agentic AI. The next big shift... or just marketing gloss?


But in commercial real estate, experts say the real story is whether organizations have the people and culture to keep up.


Here's another crazy day in AI:

  • Educational leaders address digital age challenges

  • Why Agentic AI redefines ROI in 2026

  • Why culture and leadership define AI’s impact in CRE

  • Some AI tools to try out


TODAY'S FEATURED ITEM: Schools Tackle Technology and Learning Balance

A robotic scientist in a classic white coat with 'AI Scientist' on its back stands beside a human scientist with 'Human Scientist' on their coat, looking towards the AI Scientist.

Image Credit: Wowza (created with Ideogram)


How should schools approach technology when students are growing up in a world shaped by devices and now artificial intelligence?



In the latest Supe’s On! podcast, Superintendent Dr. Steven Cook sits down with Dr. Karen Rush, who oversees both elementary education and educational technology for Bend-La Pine Schools. Their conversation digs into questions many parents are asking: How much technology is too much? What’s the difference between helpful and harmful screen time? And how should schools handle the rapid emergence of artificial intelligence tools?


Their discussion touched on several important areas:

  • Educational technology includes any learning-focused tool - Dr. Rush describes it as resources that help students understand concepts or practice skills more effectively, with elementary grades using limited technology that connects directly to what they study

  • Screen time quality varies significantly based on usage - Research shows passive activities like scrolling through videos can harm development, while interactive, educational technology used with adult guidance often supports learning goals

  • Digital responsibility needs direct instruction - Schools teach students both how to use technology tools and how to behave appropriately online, particularly important for children who have grown up surrounded by digital devices

  • Parent worries about classroom technology get addressed openly - The discussion tackles common concerns while explaining how teachers focus on having students create, collaborate, and think critically rather than just consume content

  • The district created policies before widespread adoption - Bend-La Pine established guidelines early, including safe environments like Magic School where students can explore new tools with proper supervision

  • Teachers learn to use new resources purposefully - Educators discover how technology can help with lesson planning and meeting individual student needs while keeping human connection and original thinking central

  • Today's students face unique technological circumstances - Current children are experiencing childhood during rapid technological advancement that will likely influence their education and future careers



The conversation emphasizes that technology in schools cannot be reduced to simple pros and cons. It is intertwined with broader questions of how children learn, how families support them, and how educators set boundaries and opportunities. There are genuine concerns about overuse, distraction, or reliance on tools, but also recognition that digital literacy and guided practice are part of preparing students for the world they already live in.


Rather than viewing technology as an isolated issue, Dr. Cook and Dr. Rush suggest it is one element of a much larger educational landscape. Teachers’ expertise, district policies, and family perspectives all shape how technology is used and understood. In this way, schools serve as a place not only for learning subject matter but also for learning how to interact with digital tools responsibly and thoughtfully.


Perhaps most importantly, students themselves are part of the equation. As the first generation to grow up with AI embedded in their education, their perspectives and experiences will help shape how these tools evolve. Including their voices in the ongoing dialogue may be key to ensuring that technology serves as a resource for growth rather than a barrier.



Read the article here.

Listen on Spotify here.

Listen on Apple Podcasts here.

OTHER INTERESTING AI HIGHLIGHTS:


Why Agentic AI Redefines ROI in 2026

/Uber


Uber is spotlighting the economics of Agentic AI—autonomous, goal-driven systems designed to move enterprises past the limits of traditional AI adoption. By embedding autonomy and orchestration into workflows, Agentic AI promises faster time-to-market, lower costs, and higher-quality outputs. Uber argues this shift is not just a technical upgrade but a business model transformation, with compounding benefits like bias dashboards, synthetic data, and scalable infrastructure across industries. For executives, the call is to reframe ROI: measure savings in time, rework, and risk—not just upfront costs.



Read more here.


Why Culture and Leadership Define AI’s Impact in CRE

/Jorge Blanco (Chief Strategy Officer, Altus Group), Shubhra Srivastava (VP Product Management, Altus Group), Katie Smith (Global Head of Performance, LaSalle Asset Management), Emilio Portes Cruz (Global Head of Innovations & Capital Markets, JLL)


At the Altus Innovation Summit, leaders from Altus Group, JLL, and LaSalle Asset Management underscored that AI’s impact on commercial real estate (CRE) depends less on technology itself and more on data quality, cultural change, and leadership. While AI offers faster insights and better decision-making, cultural inertia, siloed data, and misaligned incentives remain the biggest hurdles. The panelists stressed that AI should augment—not replace—human expertise, and that success will require cross-team collaboration, better governance, and upskilling across the industry. If executed thoughtfully, CRE could leap ahead by using AI to unlock cleaner data and smarter decision-making.



Read more here.

SOME AI TOOLS TO TRY OUT:


  • FunBlocks – Create AI-powered slides instantly and refine them with Markdown.

  • Jeen AI – Launch ad campaigns in minutes with smart targeting and budget tools.

  • Koah – Place ads inside AI chats when users ask questions related to your business.

That’s a wrap on today’s Almost Daily craziness.


Catch us almost every day—almost! 😉

EXCITING NEWS:

The Another Crazy Day in AI newsletter is on LinkedIn!!!



Wowza, Inc.

Leveraging AI for Enhanced Content: As part of our commitment to exploring new technologies, we used AI to help curate and refine our newsletters. This enriches our content and keeps us at the forefront of digital innovation, ensuring you stay informed with the latest trends and developments.





Another Crazy Day in AI: An Almost Daily Newsletter

Hello, AI Enthusiasts.


The workday might be done, but the AI updates are still rolling in.


Google is pushing NotebookLM beyond just reading—it wants to change how people study and interact with information. The latest additions turn it from a place to store documents into a space for real engagement, giving learners and professionals new ways to interact with ideas.


At the same time, OpenAI is putting big money into nonprofits that want to shape AI for community impact.


And one legal tech founder is calling out law firms for treating AI like a fashion accessory instead of a strategy.


Blink once and the headlines change again...


Here's another crazy day in AI:

  • NotebookLM expands beyond basic note taking

  • OpenAI opens $50M fund to back nonprofits in AI adoption

  • Law firms overspend on AI without clear ROI, warns Wu

  • Some AI tools to try out


TODAY'S FEATURED ITEM: Six Ways NotebookLM Enhances Study Sessions

A robotic scientist in a classic white coat with 'AI Scientist' on its back stands beside a human scientist with 'Human Scientist' on their coat, looking towards the AI Scientist.

Image Credit: Wowza (created with Ideogram)


Have you ever wondered why some people seem to absorb and retain information effortlessly while others struggle to make knowledge stick?



Google is introducing new features and public notebooks through NotebookLM, with the goal of turning passive reading into a more active learning experience. In a recent post, Marvin Paul (Software Engineer, NotebookLM) and Dharti Dhami (Engineering Manager, LearnX) outlined how the platform is evolving to support different ways of studying and working with information. The updates are designed to provide learners, educators, and professionals with a range of tools that move beyond reading and into active engagement.




Among the features now available:

  • Generated Flashcards and Quizzes - Transforms any uploaded document into study materials with customizable difficulty settings and sharing options for group study

  • Dynamic Report Creation - Produces various formats including blog posts and briefing documents, with contextual suggestions that adapt to your content's subject matter

  • Question-Based Learning Guide - Functions like a personal tutor by posing thoughtful questions that guide users through complex material step by step

  • Curated Academic Content - Collaboration with OpenStax provides access to interactive versions of peer-reviewed textbooks covering Biology, Chemistry, Psychology, and Business Management

  • Multi-Format Audio Overviews - Delivers content through brief summaries, critical analysis sessions, and structured debates that explore different viewpoints

  • Classroom Platform Integration - Compatible with Canvas and PowerSchool Schoology, with planned expansion to Google Classroom for seamless assignment distribution





If you've ever spent hours highlighting textbooks only to forget everything by exam time, you're definitely not alone. We've all been there - reading the same paragraph three times, making endless notes, and still feeling like the information just won't stick. These new NotebookLM features seem designed to tackle exactly that frustration by automating the kind of active study techniques that learning experts have recommended for years, but that most of us rarely have time to create ourselves.


What's particularly interesting here is how this addresses something many of us have experienced firsthand. You know how some people can listen to a lecture once and remember everything, while others need to create flashcards, quiz themselves, and discuss the material with friends to really get it? These tools essentially automate that second approach, which could level the playing field for different learning styles. Of course, there's always the question of whether a computer can really understand what you're struggling with the way a good teacher or study partner can. But for those moments when you're studying alone at midnight and just need something to help break down complex concepts, having these options available might make a real difference in how effectively you can work through challenging material.



Read the full article here.

OTHER INTERESTING AI HIGHLIGHTS:


OpenAI Opens $50M Fund to Back Nonprofits in AI Adoption

/OpenAI


OpenAI has launched the People-First AI Fund, a $50 million commitment to support nonprofits and mission-driven organizations working at the intersection of innovation and public good. The fund will provide unrestricted grants, prioritizing groups that advance AI literacy, community innovation, and economic opportunity. Eligible nonprofits don’t need prior AI experience—applications are open until October 8, with grants to be awarded by year’s end. The initiative reflects OpenAI’s belief that AI benefits should be broadly shared and shaped by communities themselves.



Read more here.


Law Firms Overspend On AI Without Clear ROI, Warns Wu

/Law Punx Podcast by Artificial Lawyer


On the latest Law Punx podcast, Horace Wu, founder of legal tech company Syntheia, argued that many law firms are spending heavily on AI without truly understanding the return on investment. While platforms like Harvey and Legora offer convenience, Wu questioned whether they deliver a real competitive edge compared to training internal staff to use AI directly. He suggested that firms often buy AI tools to avoid being left behind rather than to lead innovation. The discussion highlights the growing debate over hype versus value in AI adoption for the legal sector.



Read more here.

SOME AI TOOLS TO TRY OUT:


  • Sidekick – Build Zapier-style automations through chat.

  • CapCut AI Suite – Edit and remix content with AI-powered tools.

  • Sierra – AI customer service agents for support and subscriptions.

That’s a wrap on today’s Almost Daily craziness.


Catch us almost every day—almost! 😉

EXCITING NEWS:

The Another Crazy Day in AI newsletter is on LinkedIn!!!



Wowza, Inc.

Leveraging AI for Enhanced Content: As part of our commitment to exploring new technologies, we used AI to help curate and refine our newsletters. This enriches our content and keeps us at the forefront of digital innovation, ensuring you stay informed with the latest trends and developments.





Copyright Wowza, inc 2025
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