AIEducation

What Your Dad (and Mom) Should Know About ChatGPT

By Armando J. Perez-Carreno

A practical, no-jargon guide to explaining AI and ChatGPT to the people in your life who didn't grow up with this stuff.

I made this episode for a very specific reason: I kept getting asked by family and friends — people who are not in tech — what all this AI stuff is about. And every explanation online is either too technical or too hype-filled.

So here's the straightforward version.

What ChatGPT Actually Is

ChatGPT is a computer program that can have conversations with you. You type something, it responds. But unlike Google, which gives you a list of links, ChatGPT gives you an actual answer in plain language.

It learned how to do this by reading an enormous amount of text — books, websites, articles, conversations — and it got very good at predicting what words should come next. That's really all it's doing: predicting the most likely response to what you just said.

What It's Good At

  • **Explaining things** — Ask it to explain anything like you're talking to a 10-year-old. It's great at simplifying complex topics.
  • **Writing help** — Emails, letters, thank you notes, complaints. Tell it what you want to say and it'll draft it.
  • **Research** — Instead of opening 15 browser tabs, ask ChatGPT for a summary.
  • **Brainstorming** — Planning a trip? Ask it for a 5-day itinerary. Need recipe ideas? It's got you.
  • **Translation** — It handles dozens of languages naturally.

What It's Not Good At

  • **Facts and dates** — It sometimes makes things up confidently. Always double-check important facts.
  • **Math** — It can make basic math errors. Don't use it as a calculator.
  • **Personal advice** — It doesn't know you. Take its suggestions as starting points, not final answers.
  • **Recent events** — It might not know about things that happened very recently.

How to Start Using It

Go to chat.openai.com, create a free account, and start talking to it. Literally just type what you want like you'd text a friend. "Help me write a birthday message for my sister" or "What's a good recipe for chicken and rice?"

You don't need to be technical. You don't need special prompts. Just talk to it like a person. If it doesn't understand, rephrase. If the answer isn't what you wanted, tell it what to change.

Should You Be Worried?

No. It's a tool. Like a very smart assistant that sometimes gets things wrong. Use it to save time on things that are tedious. Don't trust it blindly with anything important. And have fun with it — ask it weird questions, see what it knows about your hometown, have it write you a poem. It's genuinely useful once you get the hang of it.

Published by Armando J. Perez-Carreno

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