Practical AI tips and real stories from your neighborhood.
There's a moment I see in almost every first session. Someone opens their laptop, stares at a blank chat window, and says: "Okay, I've seen the headlines. Now what do I actually do with this thing?"
You've probably tried to learn AI on your own. Maybe you signed up for an online course, got through the first two modules, and never went back. Here's the problem with courses.
You don't need to be "tech-savvy" to use AI. You need to be curious. If you managed a household, raised children, ran a business — you already have the skills.
The hard part isn't the technology. The hard part is knowing what to ask for. Once someone translates for you — once — it clicks.
New York has a tutor for everything. Piano. SAT prep. Tennis. But here's one you probably haven't considered: a personal AI tutor.
You opened a business because you're good at something — not because you love answering emails at 11 PM or writing Instagram captions on a Sunday.
You've tried it. You typed something in, got a bland paragraph back, thought "this is just a fancier Google," and closed the tab. The tool isn't the problem.
If you've never really used AI, welcome. You're not behind. You're not too old. You just haven't had the right introduction yet.
I've lived in Carroll Gardens for ten years. You've probably seen me biking down Court Street with my dachshund puppy, Bodhi, in the front basket.
There's a voice in your head that says: "This stuff is for younger people." I hear it in almost every first session. You're not too late.