Jaden Schaefer
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
The feature right now is supported in more than 70 different math and science concepts.
It includes compound interest, exponential decay, linear equations, column's law, Ohm's law, kinetic energy, Hooke's law.
Honestly, it's pretty cool if I'm telling the truth.
I think that right now, if you're able to kind of turn an explanation into this sort of like interactive module, the feature is going to shift from maybe just the tool giving you these really simple answers to actually helping users, and I mean hopefully students and others, explore how the concept actually works and get kind of a deeper insight
insight and understanding of the problem.
So honestly, I remember when AI came out and everyone said it's going to make everybody dumber and we're going to just outsource our brains to AI.
But I actually think it's an incredible tool for education that's going to make us smarter and we're going to be able to learn more.
OpenAI says that more than 140 million people already use ChatGPT every single week for math and science help.
I think it's over 900 million people weekly just for general use.
But 140 million just for math and science is a huge chunk of that.
And so I think this is obviously something that's been very tricky for a lot of people.
It's hard to get access to good tutors.
And this is an awesome opportunity, I think, for a lot of people.
Other companies are definitely experimenting with some similar approaches in 2025, kind of at the end of last year.
Gemini introduced some interactive diagrams within their own AI assistant as part of kind of an effort to
Get more into education, I think.
And I think I did a podcast on it back at the time.
I think the race right now to build the next generation of AI infrastructure is going to be interesting.
We have all these new features, but all of these new features have to be powered by AI.
infrastructure, they've got to be powered by more compute, as these tools just get more and more intense.