ANYTHING I CAN DO, AI CAN DO BETTER...
Scottish Daily Express
|August 30, 2025
Or can it? Express writer JANE WARREN surrendered control of her life for a week to discover just how helpful artificial intelligence really is. Prepare to be surprised by her findings
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ANCIENT civilisations dreamed of beings that could act without human control — including golden handmaidens in Greek mythology, described as having human-like understanding and speech.
However, although the idea of a nonhuman personal assistant was science fiction as recently as just a few years ago, since 2020, machine learning has led to an Al boom and a rapid expansion of free generative AI — models capable of generating images, text, music and more.
According to the global management consultants McKinsey & Company, there was a 23-percentage point increase in AI usage in businesses from early 2023 to 2024, with 78% stating they now incorporate it.
But just how reliable is it, and are the free AI models accessible to the public refined enough for day-to-day use?
My children and I decided to live by Al for a week to find out if outsourcing decision-making would save money and time. After only a few days on the system, I’m already £500 a year better off — so how did the rest of the experiment go?
SUNDAY
OUR evening meal is accompanied not by the usual family chat, but by my 16-year-old son Willem having an animated conversation with ChatGPT about the conflict in the Middle East and the ongoing dispute over Western Sahara — all delivered by the Al tool in a friendly, even mildly ironic style, that is remarkably human, even down to the pauses for breath.
“It feels as though I have a uni versity-level tutor available to me in my pocket at all times,” says Willem. “It is so engaging, eager to help and accessible, and I use it for everything from gym programming to research about current affairs.”
If the AI that I plan to use for my decision-making this week is as switched on as my son’s “personal assistant”, this bodes well.
MONDAY
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