My Father is a Homeopathy doctor, He once asked me can he integrate Ai in his workflow??
- I was Skeptical about it, like medicines given by AI could be a huge trouble
- 2 days ago when this challenge started I had no idea, I was suppose to do something about it, and then suddenly the idea stuck me, thought let's give it a try
- I saw the video of @karpathy of knowledge graph and I tried to Implement it in this project
- And I made this website, It's DOESN'T use generative AI for suggesting the Remedies
- But It's not the main thing about this project, The main thing was dynamics with my Dad
- He was the tester for this app, every little feature he ask, every little idea he suggest, I made it come true
- He Checking and pointing out all the bad medicines that was showing and asked me to fix those and I did, i enjoyed every single second of this 2 days
- I don't know I will win the @runable_hq challenge or not, Cause "I already won" in life, I will give as much challenge as possible to live and relive this 2 days, we were partners in this together, He tested it out for the real patients and it worked like a charm
- I will Keep Improving this site as much as possible
- And Thanks @runable_hq@byteHumi for making this happen, it was not a challenge for it was father son bonding experience for me. He is so proud of me now.
- Try the website from here : https://t.co/8fqv7NPD8D
the reason why emotional intelligence is extremely rare is simply cuz it is expensive.
actually modeling another person’s internal state in real time is computationally brutal.. it requires suppressing your own frame, running a parallel simulation, & updating continuously.
the “inference costs” of eq in humans are likely much higher than the most expensive ai model in existence today.
And one major problem with knowing too much or seeing things clearly is that you lose the ability to participate in certain illusions that make life easier for everyone else.
This is why meditation is so powerful. One important skill (perhaps the main skill) in meditation is recognizing that you're having a thought and letting it go. Choosing to interrupt it and not think about it anymore. Send it down the river.
You have to understand that you have to be delusional enough to believe that things are going to go right. That is often the only way to come out of the paralyzing anxiety that prevents you from initiating anything at all. If you evaluate everything too soberly, you freeze. That’s not weakness but that’s how the threat system of the brain works. When you vividly imagine every possible failure, your body treats them as real dangers. Initiation becomes biologically expensive. So sometimes you have to refuse to over-calculate risk so that motion becomes possible. Action often precedes evidence, not the other way around.
The nervous system doesn’t calm down because you understand something intellectually. It calms down because it has survived the situation enough times. Exposure rewires fear. That means you have to suspend your ego enough to accept failure, because failure is data. It is how you feed your brain, just like you feed your body. You have to stop seeing it as a verdict on your intelligence or worth. Most of the time, you are judging yourself not on action, but on your imagined potential.
Everything in life boils down to repetition. No matter how humongous the task is, the only thing you can actually do is repeat the next step. Failure is not incidental to development, it is integral to it. The brain updates through error. Without friction, there is no refinement.
Once you repeat something enough, you remove consciousness from it and turn it into muscle memory. It stops being something you force yourself to do and becomes something you can’t not do. Grand tasks feel overwhelming because the mind compresses them into one massive abstraction. In reality, they are thousands of small loops. And the only variable you control is whether you show up for the next loop. When you want to travel a hundred miles, you just have to make sure you travel the path your car light shows till the end of road.
You may have listened the same thing a thousand times, said by various persons, but the truth is that what is repeated often enough loses aesthetic freshness, but it doesn’t lose structural accuracy. That is the irony of cliches. They’ve been said so many times, in so many contexts, because people keep rediscovering their truth the hard way.
- Made CREDENZA a Ai Resume Builder
- Used @blackboxai to build it
- Used it’s ACP, Multi Agent API and Encryptions
- I haven’t add any database for now!
- Will add database and authentication so that it remembers you and don’t have to paste same job description again and again
- Suggest me best database for it
- Demo Videos will come next