I get a fair amount of cold selling emails, and recently received one that showed exactly why it's important to check what is going into an email, particularly if the email itself reflects what it is you are trying to sell. The company in question is attempting to demonstrate how AI can help a business... but all they manage to do is show how it can be a disaster. Here's what I received (to avoid embarrassment I have removed the name and website of the sender who was the owner of a company whose strapline is 'Do you know how to effectively integrate AI into your business': What is clear is they don't know how to effectively integrate AI into their business. It doesn't help that they actually tell us that the email is supposed to include an AI-sourced first line from a 'artical' (sic) they saw. And what did they really appreciate? Their website is slick and clearly has had a fair amount of effort put into it. It's unfortunate that they could demonstr...
This is one for the music history fans, and/or those with an interest in church music. This definitely includes me - I've sung in choirs since I was about 10 and this kind of music is amongst my favourite listening. Andrew Gant does a brilliant job of digging into English church music throughout history, though almost inevitably the biggest focus is from the fifteenth to the nineteenth centuries. This might seem a very dry subject, but Gant brings it alive, helped by his even drier sense of humour. This is obviously a matter of taste, but if you find amusing his remark on Prince Albert's compositions 'He certainly did not possess a strong enough musical personality to overcome the prevailing tendency to write bad Mendelssohn, but he did it quite well. His Te Deum and Jubilate contain some quite good bad Mendelssohn,' you will enjoy it as I did. Inevitably the Reformation and subsequent switches of England between protestant and Catholic features heavily with its fascina...