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AI for Professionals

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The Language Renaissance

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10 contributions to AI for Professionals
🧠💡 Using AI to Free Up Mental Energy
Quick note — sorry for being a bit quiet lately 😅 I was doing some long travelling… lots of trains, airports, connections, the whole thing. Now I’m finally settled for the next few months, which actually made me realize something interesting. I used AI a lot to plan and execute this whole trip properly — routes, timing, decisions, adjustments — and honestly, it made everything way smoother. What surprised me is how much this also helps professionally: I’m basically practicing the same skills, freeing up mental energy, and staying clearer and more focused for work. Do you experience the same thing with AI? Has it helped you think better, organize your life, or work more efficiently? Curious to hear your thoughts 👇
🧠💡 Using AI to Free Up Mental Energy
0 likes • 1d
@Jacob Gonzaga me too.😬
1 like • 1d
@Samuel Cinati Teixeira I agree...I think Anki is the best app to improve your memory, but it's hard sometimes to stay motivated to do it every day without missing a day.
🧠🤖 Where are professionals underutilizing AI the most?
Most people use AI for answers. Fewer use it for leverage. From what I’ve seen, the biggest missed opportunities usually fall into three areas: 1) Planning Using AI to think before acting: clarifying goals, mapping options, stress-testing decisions, and spotting blind spots early. Most people skip this and jump straight to execution. 2) Execution Breaking vague ideas into concrete steps, timelines, checklists, and next actions. AI is incredibly good at turning “I want to do X” into “here’s what to do today.” 3) Communication Explaining ideas more clearly, adapting messages to different audiences, preparing tough conversations, or turning messy thinking into something structured and persuasive. My sense is that many professionals still treat AI like a smarter Google, instead of a thinking partner embedded in their workflow. Curious to hear from you: Where do you think AI is most underutilized right now — planning, execution, communication, or somewhere else entirely?
🧠🤖 Where are professionals underutilizing AI the most?
1 like • 6d
I guess people in general don’t use the real potential of AI. Its power is becoming incredible when it comes to professional use, but as time goes by, people will learn how to use it and how to take advantage of it. Some people are using it for the wrong purposes, and that can be a problem.🤔
1 like • 4d
@Gabriel Silva For professional use, I guess AI can solve problems, suggest improvements, and generate ideas by providing solutions that people can’t immediately come up with. When you have to make a decision, you need a lot of information that you must check, organize, and think about to find the best solution. AI already has this information in its data and can give you alternatives to solve problems or ideas to rearrange things.
🧠🚀 Learning with AI: From zero to hero — how far can it really take you?
One of the most interesting questions right now is not whether AI helps us learn faster — but how far that acceleration actually goes. If someone starts close to zero today, AI can: - explain concepts on demand - adapt explanations to your level - generate examples, exercises, and feedback - help you practice more consistently This applies to many domains: - coding - languages - music - professional skills - analytical or creative work In many cases, AI seems to compress the early and middle stages of learning dramatically. But there are also limits: - intuition still takes time - taste and judgment aren’t instant - real-world constraints push back - some skills only solidify through repetition and exposure So the interesting question isn’t “Can AI make you an expert overnight?” It’s something more nuanced. How far can AI realistically take someone — and where does the acceleration slow down? And from your own experience: - Where did AI help you most? - Where did it stop being enough on its own? - What still required time, effort, or human feedback? Curious to hear how people here see the real ceiling of AI-accelerated learning — across different skills and professions.
🧠🚀 Learning with AI: From zero to hero — how far can it really take you?
1 like • 10d
@Gabriel Silva I agree. Let me tell you how I use AI. I start by writing the whole sentence here in the comment space, and after I completely finish my thoughts, I copy what I wrote and notice there are many grammar errors. Usually, I don’t make serious mistakes — they’re more often punctuation errors and a few uncommon word choices. Then AI tells me it would sound more natural if I replaced certain words. Sometimes I don’t change anything and keep my original version because I want it to sound more like me. Haha. But I don’t know if I’ll remember the suggestions I receive in the future. I know that repetition is the key, and I’m always doing it… Let’s see where it takes me
0 likes • 9d
@Gabriel Silva I totally agree, thanks Gabriel, your feedback is really important to me.🙏👊
🧠🎯 Today’s challenge: raise $10,000 with AI
Quick thought experiment: An eccentric millionaire commissions you to raise $10,000 in 10 days for a worthwhile cause. You don’t choose the cause — you just have to make it work. You’re allowed to use AI as part of the process — for thinking, planning, execution, and iteration — but you are still responsible for decisions and action. This isn’t about fantasy or perfect plans. It’s about how you’d realistically approach the problem. For example, AI could help you: - clarify constraints and priorities - brainstorm feasible fundraising approaches - evaluate what’s realistic under time pressure - shape messaging and outreach - design simple assets (copy, structure, scripts) - anticipate risks and bottlenecks - adjust the plan if something underperforms You don’t need a full strategy document. A rough but thoughtful outline is enough. Challenge: If you had to start today, how would you use AI to go from zero to $10,000 in 10 days? You can share: - the first concrete step you’d take - how AI fits into your process - or what you think would be the hardest part There’s no single right answer — the value is in seeing how different professionals think and execute.
🧠🎯 Today’s challenge: raise $10,000 with AI
0 likes • 10d
@Gabriel Silva What is the most valuable thing in life? I’d go in this direction: Something that helps people save time, maybe a modern gadget.”
0 likes • 10d
@Jacob Gonzaga I agree, but in this case the person would need to be an influencer, not an ordinary person.
🧠⚙️ From fear to leverage: using AI as a professional
A lot of the conversation around AI at work starts with fear: Will this replace me? Will my role still matter? What I’m seeing in practice is something more nuanced. AI doesn’t replace professionals directly. It amplifies how they already work. When AI is used mainly to: - generate generic output - follow templates without thinking - skip judgment and context the work becomes easier to replace. But when AI is used to: - clarify decisions earlier - explore trade-offs before committing - surface blind spots and assumptions - connect ideas across domains it actually strengthens the parts of the job that matter most. In my own work, AI hasn’t reduced my role. It has made the thinking layer more visible — and more valuable. The professionals who benefit most aren’t the ones chasing every new tool. They’re the ones who use AI to: - ask better questions - narrow scope instead of expanding it - make clearer decisions sooner AI doesn’t decide who’s replaceable. It rewards clarity, judgment, and context. I’m curious to hear your perspective: How do you think professionals can use AI to become harder to replace — not by doing more, but by strengthening what only they can provide?
🧠⚙️ From fear to leverage: using AI as a professional
1 like • 11d
@João Felipe de Mello Araujo I agree.
0 likes • 11d
@João Felipe de Mello Araujo exactly
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Victor Junior
3
37points to level up
@victor-junior-5295
I'm very shy when it comes to speaking English in public, but I'll get over it.

Active 6h ago
Joined Jan 22, 2026