The Wonders of A.I.
Maybe as short as a year ago, I would likely have only been able to look at the writing on this postcard, ponder what secrets it might hold, and then move on without every knowing. But with the rapidly accelerating Artificial Intelligence world, those days are relegated to the dust bin of our history. I simply uploaded this very image into Google's Gemini with the instruction to translate the German to English and in about three seconds, knew exactly what it said.
Dearest Klärchen (Little Clara),
For the New Year, I wish you all the very best that one could possibly imagine, and much enduring success with the German language. I hope your little trip went well. Did you also think of me sometimes? Your Else is looking forward to a happy reunion on Thursday.
I don't know who Else is/was and likely A.I. won't solve that one for me... at least right now.
I thought I would test A.I.'s abilities further and upload this postcard which has nary a marking describing where this is much less the country. I asked Gemini to tell me what it could about the scene and it responded with:
This postcard captures a bustling street scene from early 20th-century Berlin, Germany. Specifically, you are looking at the intersection of Leipziger Straße and Friedrichstraße, which was the busiest and most famous commercial hub in the city during the Imperial and Weimar eras.
A.I. went on to tell me that the big building in the center with the arched recesses on the lower level was the Wertheim Leipziger Straße which some called at the time the most beautiful department store in all of Germany. Unfortunately, it was damaged during World War II and after being fixed up, eventually demolished along with everything else in the photo. Indeed, plopping myself down in this very intersection using Google Earth reveals and much changed landscape.
Further inquiries told me that the department store sat on the NE corner of that intersection and so I used Google Earth to wrangle a view of the NE corner as it looks today. I finally digitally turned over the postcard for the first time to see what was on the writing side of it and was initially worried because it said Potsdamer Platz. But putting that into Google Earth takes me to the very same intersection. Wikipedia even added that the Berlin Wall eventually went right through this intersection which besides the bombings, helps explain why it looks totally different now.
I think I prefer looking at the postcard version


Wow. I mean, what else is there to say? I just inherited a bunch of old family photos. Maybe AI could help me glean a few new details.
ReplyDeleteAI is progressing quite fast. A year ago I tried it several times and was underwhelmed by it for the most part. Now I am in awe at what it can do.
DeleteI'm in awe that AI could read the script. Even in English I would have trouble with that.
ReplyDeleteIt blows my mind too! In the past, I have easily blown an hour or two transcribing English documents written in unfamiliar script and AI can do it in seconds now. To do it with a foreign language to me is just mind blowing.
DeleteI have to admit, that's a positive for AI.
ReplyDeleteI don't see it reproducing everything a human does in a day anytime soon but it is sure good at specific tasks with narrow scopes.
DeleteIt’s impressive, but it unnerves me a tad. I have a Flickr friend who does great AI imagery. He has AI render something but then he processes to in Photoshop as he would do with his own photos.
ReplyDeleteTo be honest, it unnerves me too AC. But since it is out of my control, I figure I might as well utilize it until it becomes self aware and utilizes me!
DeleteI never thought to use AI to solve mysteries like this, but why not?! (I might do it as a last resort, because I like puzzling things out myself if possible!)
ReplyDeleteI do too to some extent and would have figured it out with the writing on the back but without that, it would have been nearly impossible so AI would have been the only solution.
DeleteElon Musk's vision of not needing to work and having all our needs taken care of because of AI is a frightening concept. It is amazing what our computers are now capable of doing for us. I was put into a very challenging position requiring spreadsheets (which I totally don't do), mail merges, and tabulations. Claude.ai saved me - step by step, patiently repeating if need be, and I was successful in the task. Wonderful and scary at the same time.
ReplyDeleteAI definitely scares me in a lot of ways but since I am powerless to do anything about it, I might as well enjoy it until it exterminates me.
DeleteIt is truly mind-blowing to see what AI can do with those old scripts and photos. Transcribing a foreign language postcard in seconds is a game-changer for anyone interested in history or genealogy. I love the 'then and now' comparison with the Berlin intersection, too. It’s a bit unnerving how fast it’s moving, but what a powerful tool to have in the toolkit.
ReplyDeleteIt truly has been a paradigm shift for genealogy. Things are answered now in seconds that the previous generation might have had to spend weeks traveling and sorting to answer.
DeleteImpressive!
ReplyDeleteI was duly impressed.
DeleteI use Google Lens to translate my mother’s letters to my aunt to make sure it’s OK since she has dementia. I have found that so far it’s not entirely accurate with handwritten Japanese characters. It’s fine if typed out though.
ReplyDeleteI have no skills to verify my translations. But they always seem plausible.
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