I doubt it comes as much surprise that somebody like me likes Jarvis.

I like Jarvis.

I mean, what’s not to like?

It’s an intelligent system that builds stuff for you.

You talk to it, it goes and does.

You get stuff out,

you think about renaming it or reworking it,whatever it is,

whatever the “re” is.

Maybe it needs to edit it, I don’t know.

But that would be because it built something that worked.

Or maybe it was a little off and you had to figure something out.

Yeah, but it still produced something.

So I like Jarvis.

And I want Jarvis.

Because it’d be a whole lot more cool to say, hey, show me the conversions for the last month.

What was the rate?

What was going on there?

And it just pulls it up.So we’re building RIDL to do this.

So you can talk to him.

We’ll pull up dashboard items that you need or build out data pipelines that you need.

And you just work with it like that.

So it has a set of known capabilities.

Talk to it, type it in, whatever it is, and it goes and does it.

That’s what I’m into.

It’s what sounds cool to me.

It’s where I think we all should be.

It seems a lot easier than building 800 item workflows and other data pipeline

tools, data workflow tools.

Call me crazy.

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