Try GOLD - Free
Can AI Really Teach a Novice Wood-worker How to Complete Their First Project?
Popular Mechanics US
|July - August 2023
What began as a "simple" thought experiment quickly morphed into a complicated and potentially dangerous hands-on experience in the real world of woodworking
It was my first time using a miter saw-or any other power tool, for that matter-and I had just finished meticulously crosscutting four 7-inch faces for a plain wooden box. Despite being a novice woodworker, I was proud of my accuracy, with each piece perfectly square at 90-degree angles.
But when it came time to rotate the saw to a 45-degree angle to cut the miters along each edge, I ran into a dire situation: The sides of the box were too tall to fit against the saw's fence and safely make clean, accurate cuts. My design was flawed; I should have planned to create a smaller box from the get-go. Should I attempt the cuts anyway and risk sending wooden shrapnel flying in unpredictable, erratic patterns around the woodshop, or should I go back to the drawing board?
ChatGPT, the now-omnipresent artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot taking over the internet, is what got me into this mess in the first place. And when I desperately needed advice, the disembodied computer brain left me hanging.

A "SIMPLE" EXPERIMENT
A few weeks beforehand, I had provided ChatGPT with what I (mistakenly) thought to be a straightforward prompt: "What's a basic woodworking project I can start with?" In a matter of seconds, it cranked out a suggestion for a "simple wooden box."
I was heartened: It was finally time to revisit a skill I had written off completely back in middle school after a botched attempt at building a gumball machine. A substitute woodshop teacher had "helped" me cut the wood by taking over completely, severely burning the wood.
This story is from the July - August 2023 edition of Popular Mechanics US.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Popular Mechanics US
Popular Mechanics US
HOW TO UNCLOG A SINK
IF YOUR SINK IS CLOGGED AND PLUNGING fails to clear the blockage, look to your P-trap (or simply, “trap”) before calling a plumber.
1 mins
January / February 2026
Popular Mechanics US
A WEIRD (AND FREE!) SOUND SYSTEM HACK
THERE ARE SO MANY VARIABLES TO how a room's dimensions, a building's construction, the placement of furniture, and the materials of that furniture affect the sound of speakers and subwoofers that there's no way to offer a one-size-fits-all, \"put it here\" maxim for the absolute best subwoofer sound quality.
1 mins
January / February 2026
Popular Mechanics US
The Fringes of Life
AT FIRST GLANCE, CREATING A DEFINItion of \"life\" seems simple.
2 mins
January / February 2026
Popular Mechanics US
THE SAND THIEVES
Sand is the hidden architecture of our modern world—but it's running out. Global mafias are stealing this precious resource from right beneath our feet, and they're willing to kill for it.
18 mins
January / February 2026
Popular Mechanics US
OPERATION PLUTO
THE ALLIES’ SECRET UNDERWATER WEAPON THAT HELPED DEFEAT THE NAZIS
13 mins
January / February 2026
Popular Mechanics US
5 WAYS TO KEEP YOUR GENERATOR IN WORKING ORDER
IF YOU HAVE A GAS GENERAtor, use ethanol-free gas treated with fuel stabilizer, and maintain a full tank when not in use; keep a gas can full of stabilized fuel on hand during peak disaster season.
1 min
January / February 2026
Popular Mechanics US
Minivans
MINIVANS ARE MAKING A COMEBACK, and that's kind of surprising, as they're some of the most polarizing vehicles on the road and have always been built with a function-over-form ethos.
1 mins
January / February 2026
Popular Mechanics US
3 WAYS TO FIND A STUD WITHOUT A STUD FINDER
There is a noticeably hollow sound when you knock on the space between the studs versus when you knock on drywall that has a stud behind it.
1 min
January / February 2026
Popular Mechanics US
A Cell-Sized Elephant
EVER SINCE THE POPULARITY OF 3D printing skyrocketed in the midaughts, people have been manufacturing everything from chocolate to rocket fuel-and that list now includes a microscopic elephant inside of a living cell. Technology has really leveled up since 2005.
1 mins
January / February 2026
Popular Mechanics US
WHO SETS THE DOOMSDAY CLOCK?
In the shadow of my family's atomic legacy, I set out to understand the increasingly urgent debate about humanity's capacity to end itself and what it can teach us about living.
21 mins
January / February 2026
Translate
Change font size
