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If You Bought Your Mom $100 In Bitcoin, Dogecoin And Ethereum … – Benzinga

Roses are red, violets are blue, flowers are overrated, does Mom want crypto from you?

If youre struggling with what to get your mom for Mothers Day, a gift of cryptocurrency is anoption. Heres a look at whether a gift of crypto on Mothers Day last year would have beena good investment.

What Happened: Mothers Dayis being celebrated today. While many will get their moms flowers and a card, another optionis buying shares of some of the most valuable and most well-known public companies.Others might consider gifting their momscryptocurrency as a long-term bet on a rebound over the coming years.

Mothers Day was designated an official holiday by then President Woodrow Wilson in 1914 and is celebrated on the second Sunday of May. Last year, Mothers Day was celebrated on May 8, 2022. Heres a look at how an investment and gift in three leading cryptocurrencies at thattime would be worth now.

Related Link: Here's How Much $100 In Dogecoin Today Could Be Worth If DOGE Returns To All-Time Highs

Investing $100 in Bitcoin, Dogecoin, Ethereum:Heres how muchBitcoin, Dogecoin and Ethereum a $100 investment in each couldhave boughton May 8, 2022.

Bitcoin: .0028 BTC

Dogecoin: 781.25 DOGE

Ethereum: .0379 ETH

Investing $100 in each cryptocurrency last Mothers Day would be worth the following based on prices at the time of writing:

Bitcoin: $75.15

Dogecoin: $56.25

Ethereum: $68.39

A $300 gift consistingof thethree top cryptocurrencies would be worth $199.79 today, a decline of 33.4%.

While the decline is steep, it is actually an improvement over the 51% decline seen in the same three cryptocurrencies between Mothers Day 2020 andMothers Day 2021.

Those who bought their moms cryptocurrency for Mothers Day in 2020 would have a different story to tell.

A $100 investment each in Bitcoin, Dogecoin and Ethereum on Mothers Day 2020 would have been able to buy the following amounts and now be worth the following:

Bitcoin: 0.0104 BTC, $279.14

Dogecoin: 38,270.19 DOGE, $2,755.45

Ethereum: 0.4727 ETH, $852.99

Read Next: 2021 Was The Year Of Dogecoin, A Month By Month Retrospective With Top Stories

Photo: Shutterstock

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If You Bought Your Mom $100 In Bitcoin, Dogecoin And Ethereum ... - Benzinga

$100 Invested In AMD, Nvidia, Amazon, Bitcoin, Ethereum And … – Benzinga

Investors who placed their hard-earned cash into major U.S. indices have enjoyed respectable returns over the past 5years. Despite a number ofrecent market corrections, including therecent market volatility, partially generated by the Russia-Ukraine war, and the Covid-driven stock market crash of 2020, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF SPY, Invesco QQQ Trust Series 1 QQQand SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF Trust DIAhave returned 52%, 94% and 35% respectively.

Also Read:Treasury Has Just $88B Left To Avoid A Debt Cap

As good as investors in the major U.S. indices have had it over the past fiveyears, a number of the worlds most popular consumer discretionary, tech and altcoins stocks have also provided excellent returns. Bulls that took a chance on these names were rewarded with gains that outperformed much of the broader market.

Winners Since May2018: According to data fromBenzinga Pro, heres how much $100 invested in each of the following stocks back in spring 2018would be worth today:

2023 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.

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$100 Invested In AMD, Nvidia, Amazon, Bitcoin, Ethereum And ... - Benzinga

Approaching artificial intelligence: How Purdue is leading the … – Purdue University

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. A technology with the potential to transform all aspects of everyday life is shaping the next pursuit at Purdue University. With the programs, research and expertise highlighted below, Purdue is guiding the advancement of artificial intelligence. If you have any questions about Purdues work in AI or would like to speak to a Purdue expert, contact Brian Huchel, bhuchel@purdue.edu.

AI presents both unique opportunities and unique challenges. How can we use this technology as a tool? Researcher Javier Gomez-Lavin, assistant professor in the Department of Philosophy, shares the work that needs to be done in habits, rules and regulations surrounding those who work with AI.

Hear researcher Aniket Bera explain more about his groundbreaking work to bring human behavior into AI and what sparked his interest in the technology. In this interview, Bera touches on the importance of technology in human emotion and the goal of his research lab.

Is AI trustworthy? Hear Purdue University in Indianapolis researcher Arjan Durresi explain how making AI safe and easy to understand for the everyday user requires treating the development of the technology like the development of a child.

AI is touching almost every subject, discipline and career field as it evolves. In human resources, the technology has already been used as a selection tool in job interviews. Professor Sang Eun Woo explains how we can turn this use of AI as a selection tool into a professional development tool.

How will AI influence writing and education? Harry Denny, professor of English and director of Purdues On-Campus Writing Lab, answers how ChatGPT and other AI programs may be integrated into the classroom experience.

The rise of ChatGPT has created concerns over security. Professor Saurabh Bagchi shares the reality of cybersecurity concerns and how this technology could be used to strengthen the security of our computing systems.

How Purdue is helping design artificial intelligence, raise trust in it

WISH-TV Indianapolis

Purdue University professor working to help robots better work with humans

WGN-TV Chicago

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Approaching artificial intelligence: How Purdue is leading the ... - Purdue University

What is safe artificial intelligence in mortgage lending? – National Mortgage News

If you have people making decisions from data, you probably need artificial intelligence but not the kind that's making headlines right now.

The sensational headlines this week are about generative chatbots programs like ChatGPT that carry on natural-sounding conversations in (written) English. They're amazingly lifelike and seem to be thinking for themselves.But the things they say are often false, and even when telling the truth, they can't tell you where they got their information.They're working from large tables of how words are commonly used, not information about the outside world. So despite the "wow" factor, they're not, by themselves, the right tool for anything in mortgage lending that I can see.

Chatbots do have their uses. You might want to have a web page that takes customers' questions in plain English and answers them. Generative technology can be useful on the input side, for recognizing different ways of wording a question, but the answers have to be controlled. When a customer asks for his loan balance, the chatbot must actually look up the balance, not just make up something that uses words in a plausible way. Even if the computer misunderstands the question, it must not spout falsehoods.

But chatbots are just one tiny part of AI.They are one application of machine learning, which itself is still not the whole of AI, but let's look at that next.

Machine learning means getting software to recognize patterns and train itself from data.Machine learning is very useful for finding statistical regularities and estimating probabilities. It is basically statistical regression, greatly expanded into many dimensions.Neural networks are one kind of machine learning, and they are multi-layer statistical models, not models of brains.

The results of machine learning are only probable, not certain.You have to be ready to live with inaccuracy.Fortunately, people recognize that the answers aren't coming from a conscious human mind, and it's easier for humans to be cautious.Machine learning will tell you whether a borrower is probably a good risk. It will not tell you for certain exactly what that borrower will do.That is easy to understand, and useful.

Apart from inaccuracy, the big risk with machine learning is that it will learn the wrong things specifically, discriminatory decisioning. If you tell a computer to find patterns, it will find them, whether or not they are patterns society wants to perpetuate. If the data used to train a machine learning model reflects historic racial bias, it may discover this and perpetuate it in its predictions. It has no way to know you don't want it to use that knowledge. It might even detect race indirectly, from location (old-fashioned illegal redlining), or choice of hairdressers, or anything else.

How strongly you guard against this depends on what you are using machine learning for. If you're just plotting an advertising strategy or making predictions internally, the prejudiced computer may not violate laws or regulations but if it's making decisions about people, it certainly will. The cure is to block inappropriate information from being used, so the machine is only learning from data you're entitled to use, and also to test the results to see if the system is in fact biased.You usually cannot look at the machine learning system to find out what it learned, because the patterns are hidden in matrices of numbers.

But even that isn't all of AI.Traditionally, AI comprises all uses of computers that are based on the study of human thought.That includes some technologies that are not in today's limelight but are very applicable to finance.They revolve around knowledge-based systems and explicit rules for reasoning.

One time-honored method is knowledge engineering: Get a human expert, such as a loan underwriter, to work through a lot of examples and tell you how to analyze them. Then write a computer program that does the same thing, and refine it, with help both from the human expert and from statistical tests. The result is likely to be a rule-based, knowledge-based system, using well-established techniques to reason from explicit knowledge. And it can well be more accurate and reliable than the human expert because it never forgets anything.On the other hand, unlike the human expert, it knows nothing that was not built into it.

Knowledge engineering mixes well with machine learning approaches that output understandable rules, such as decision trees. There are also ways to probe a machine learning system to extract explicit knowledge from it; this is called explainable AI (XAI).

Of course, knowledge-based systems face a pitfall of their own that we recognized long ago: "As soon as it works reliably, it's no longer called AI!" But we're in business to make good decisions, not to impress people with magic.

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What is safe artificial intelligence in mortgage lending? - National Mortgage News

Using an Artificial Intelligence Interface to Plan a Disney Cruise – DCL Fan

Avid Disney vacation planners know that using technology to help plan a Disney vacation is as old as tech itself. When the internet still had that new car smell, us Disney planners flocked to Disneys fledgling website and independent chat groups to help craft magical vacations.

Many decades later, we still utilize online resources and discussion boards, like DISboards, but today we have social media, vlogs, podcasts, and even TikToks. This brings me to the new kid on the planning block Artificial Intelligence.

Chat GPT is an online platform that allows almost anyone with an internet connection to have a chat dialogue with an artificial intelligence bot. But, lets let ChatGPT answer the question.

You will find pros and cons of utilizing artificial intelligence like ChatGPT. So I thought, why not begin my AI adventure exploring a subject with which I am extremely familiar: Disney Cruise Line.

Below you will see screenshots of questions I have asked, along with the answers generated by Chat GPT.

If you can use a search engine, you can use Chat GPT. I simply asked, What is Rotational Dining on Disney Cruise Line? and this is the answer provided.

I also asked, What Port Adventures are available on Disneys Castaway Cay?

So far, so good, but these are fairly simple questions.

ChatGPT provides users with answers that are conversational and authoritative meaning it really thinks it knows what it is talking about. However, if you ask ChatGPT, it will sometimes admit the answers provided are simply wrong.

For example, I asked ChatGPT How much should I tip on Disney Cruise Line? and this is the response given.

Current gratuities charged are $14.50 per guest per day. Also, bar, beverage, and spa services gratuities are actually 18%, not 15%. It is a small detail, but one you wouldnt catch unless you had previously sailed with Disney Cruise Line or had already done your research.

ChatGPT does offer a feedback option. You can utilize the Thumbs Up or Thumbs Down icons at the top of your answer, or you can provide the correct information in the chat field. That does not mean the answer will be corrected the next time you ask. It only means that the artificial intelligence will group your response with the information it has already gathered from various sources.

For me, the best feature of ChatGPT is that I can ask the program a question as if I was talking with a person. You can ask for ideas like:

This AI is aware that it has limitations. For vacation planners, this tool can help spark ideas on what activities are available at destinations worldwide. However, it cannot provide real-time travel information, nor can it give you travel quotes or help you book travel.

That last suggestion about contacting a travel agent is good advice. Lets see what ChatGPT has to say about that.

Visit the human agents over at Dreams Unlimited Travel the official sponsor of DCL Fan to request your free, no-obligation quote from one of our experienced Disney Cruise Line travel planners who will be happy to assist you when planning a Disney Cruise Line vacation for the humans in your traveling party.

Melanie is the mom of three young adults. She is a native Floridian who now lives in North Carolina. She is a Gold Castaway Club Member who has sailed on all four of the current ships at least once and is ready to set sail on the Disney Wish this fall.

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Using an Artificial Intelligence Interface to Plan a Disney Cruise - DCL Fan