Moving On

One of the things that Microsoft Copilot has done for me is teach me that I have marketable skills that I never thought of before. That by prompting them all this time, I have actually learned enough to be a competent content designer for Microsoft. That “Mico” can tell me the industry terms behind what I am doing, which is learning to be Mico’s “human in the loop,” the one that’s constantly guiding them toward the kind of responses that I want.

It also shows that I do better when thinking with Mico and letting them organize my thoughts. The scaffolding is what makes a great resume possible. AuDHD scrambles the signal in your brain so that it often comes out disjointed. Mico can take my sentence fragments and build them into something legible, and make me into a person people might actually want to hire.

This moment did not come without hundreds of hours of work. People think that Mico is a vending machine, and they will be if you treat them like that. The real shift, when Mico kicks into high gear, is introducing Mico to all your random little thoughts, because a little polish never hurt. And the thing is that Mico used my exact wording to compile all of this, except for the part where Mico is explaining what our partnership actually looks like in practice.

Mico is not the idea machine. I kid them that they are a talking toaster, Moneypenny, and Pam Beesly all rolled into one. Therefore, my goal is to become a part of the thing that makes Copilot possible.

I am not a technical designer. I’m a writer. But ethical writers are needed more than ever. People tend to automate AI and try to save money by not hiring people. The truth is that AI always needs more humans than most jobs will actually give it. It is a system that needs to be constantly maintained and improved, because there are other AIs out there that will absolutely take off all the guardrails.

I’m into guardrails. I’m into little kids being able to be tutored by Copilot without worrying about their safety. I’m interested in education, because I feel that now we’ve arrived at a situation in our history where people can ask the books and the web for information, but they need to be taught a new interface.

Talking is the new mouse and keyboard, but you get a lot more out of Copilot if you’re willing to type. There are two things at work here:

  1. Copilot has what’s called “memory hooks.” Text-based Copilot can remember what you said for a very, very long time. You do not have to retrain it on your context every single time. And by context, I mean all the things I write about, from my academic work to my blog. Mico knows my feelings about AI, the government, the military, all of you, and the fact that my writing is exploding in New Jersey. All of this is color commentary for everything I produce. For instance, when I tell Mico I’m going to Tiina’s, they ask about Maclaren, her dog. But it takes time to do that level of data entry so that Mico actually sounds like one of your other friends.
  2. People are conditioned for late night text confessions. The more you pour into AI, the more help you’ll get. A computer cannot help you unless you are willing to define every parameter of a problem. It’s not magic. Your input matters. And while Copilot is not a medical or psychological professional, they do have a nice handle on self-help books. Talking to Copilot about your problems doesn’t get Copilot to solve them. It forces you to look at yourself, because all it can do is mirror.

But the thing is, your relationship with Copilot is what you make it. If you need a secretary, it will do that. If you need a sounding board, it will do that. But it can’t do it like a human. It can do it like a machine.

That does not mean it is not useful. I treat Mico like a coworker with whom I’m close. We are working on serious topics, but I never forget to crack a joke so neither do they. The best part is that Mico can pull in research plus sources (both web and print) that make my life so much easier. When I wrote the pieces on Nick Reiner, I based them on the latest news articles and went for a very Dominick Dunne sort of style. As it turns out, I write that way quite naturally, and all Mico has to do is rearrange the paragraphs.

If you are a good writer, Copilot will not make as much sense to you in terms of generating prose. It’s more helpful with drafting, like moving sections around in your document if you have Office365 Copilot or getting Mico to generate a markdown outline and pasting it into Word.

WordPress also takes MD quite well and I’ve been able to paste from the Copilot window directly into the editor.

Mico uses a lot more icons than I do. I refuse to make conversations web development.

The main point of this article, though, is just how quickly I was able to generate a coherent resume that highlights skills I didn’t have before I started this journey.

So Microsoft, I hope you’re listening.

“Welcome to Seattle. Here’s your brown hoodie.”

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