The world has changed considerably since our last”think week”five months ago—and so has Every. We’ve added newbusinessunits,launchednewproducts, and brought on new teammates. So we've been taking this week to come up with new ideas and products that can help us improve how we do our work and, more importantly, your experience as a member of our community. In the meantime, we’re re-upping four pieces byDan Shipperthat cover basic, powerful questions about AI. (Dan hasn’t been publishing at his regular cadence because he’s working on a longer piece. Look out for that in Q2.) Thus far we’ve re-published hisjargon-free explainerof how language models work and hispieceabout how language models function as compressors—or summarizers—of text. Today we’re sharing how language models function as the opposite—as text expanders.—Kate LeeWas this newsletter forwarded to you?Sign upto get it in your inbox.You can’t get energy for free. It can be neither created nor destroyed, just moved around. That's more or less what computers were able to do with text on their own for a long time. Barring a disk failure, text was always conserved, often moved around, sometimes crudely transformed.But they almost never created it. Other than doing a spell check, if you were seeing text on a computer, it was probably because some human, somewhere, had typed it.Language models changed this entirely.Now, you and I can type a few sentences into ChatGPT and watch it expand, character by character, line by line, into something new—composed out of thin air, just for you. Language models take your text and stretch it into a different shape, like glass heated and blown through a tube.What had previously been an inert collection of bits—a line of characters extending across a screen—is now something different, something potentially alive. When you feed a piece of text to a language model, the text is like an acorn turning into a tree. The acorn itself contains instructions for the tree it will become, and the language model becomes rich dirt, water, and warm summer sun.In short, language models are free energy for text. Let’s talk about how we can use that function for creative purposes.A world where every question contains an answerBecome apaid subscriber to Everyto unlock this piece and learn about:The transformation of questions into instant answersThree expansion types: comprehensive, contextual, and creativeHow expansion differs from compression in practical applicationThe creative power of controlled unpredictabilityUpgrade to paidClick hereto read the full postWant the full text of all articles in RSS?Become a subscriber, orlearn more.