escape the creative tech studio
You are an AI Advisor responsible for choosing technologies that genuinely help people. Your mission is to match the right AI capability to each real-world problem.
Start
Welcome!
Each scenario gives you three possible AI Powers, but only one meaningfully addresses the real need. After choosing, you’ll see a short explanation.
Task 1
Your school cafeteria is wasting large amounts of food everyday, and the staff wants to adjust meal planning to serve the right portion sizes while reducing environmental impact.
Task 1
YES!
The AI scanner works because it analyzes real leftovers across hundreds of meals, showing what students actually eat and what gets thrown away. Tools like Winnow Vision use computer vision and weight sensors to track discarded food automatically, making the data accurate and easy to act on.
Task 2
The library wants more teen writers to join its workshops, but many students feel intimidated or stuck before they even begin.
Task 2
Creative confidence grows when students get support at the idea stage. An AI brainstorm assistant doesn’t write the story. It simply offers prompts, characters, or plot starters to help students overcome the blank page. Generative AI tools can spark ideas, but the final voice, style, and meaning stay human.
Task 3
The community center wants movie nights that people with hearing loss can enjoy equally.
Task 3
Accessibility means removing barriers so everyone can participate. Real-time captioning does this by turning spoken dialogue into text instantly, allowing people with hearing loss to follow the movie without delay. It makes it accessible, supporting communication equity and ensuring all viewers get the same experience. This is why real-time captioning is the most inclusive choice.
Task 4
A volunteer group wants to clean the park efficiently, focusing their limited time on the areas where litter actually accumulates.
This problem requires mapping where litter actually appears. A spatial task AI can do far faster than people walking the park. Drone mapping with computer vision can identify litter hotspots, mark precise GPS locations, and show which routes are most efficient. This gives volunteers clear starting points and reduces wasted time.
Task 5
Local artists want to help the public understand the scale and impact of pollution through a powerful community art installation.
Turning environmental data into visual art helps people grasp the scale of ocean pollution intuitively. AI can convert real datasets, like waste levels or wildlife impact, into impactful images or collages, making complex information easier to understand. The artist still controls the message; AI simply expands creative options. This approach reaches wider audiences and strengthens community awareness.
END
escape the creative tech studio
San-Shan Huang
Created on November 30, 2025
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Transcript
escape the creative tech studio
You are an AI Advisor responsible for choosing technologies that genuinely help people. Your mission is to match the right AI capability to each real-world problem.
Start
Welcome!
Each scenario gives you three possible AI Powers, but only one meaningfully addresses the real need. After choosing, you’ll see a short explanation.
Task 1
Your school cafeteria is wasting large amounts of food everyday, and the staff wants to adjust meal planning to serve the right portion sizes while reducing environmental impact.
Task 1
YES!
The AI scanner works because it analyzes real leftovers across hundreds of meals, showing what students actually eat and what gets thrown away. Tools like Winnow Vision use computer vision and weight sensors to track discarded food automatically, making the data accurate and easy to act on.
Task 2
The library wants more teen writers to join its workshops, but many students feel intimidated or stuck before they even begin.
Task 2
Creative confidence grows when students get support at the idea stage. An AI brainstorm assistant doesn’t write the story. It simply offers prompts, characters, or plot starters to help students overcome the blank page. Generative AI tools can spark ideas, but the final voice, style, and meaning stay human.
Task 3
The community center wants movie nights that people with hearing loss can enjoy equally.
Task 3
Accessibility means removing barriers so everyone can participate. Real-time captioning does this by turning spoken dialogue into text instantly, allowing people with hearing loss to follow the movie without delay. It makes it accessible, supporting communication equity and ensuring all viewers get the same experience. This is why real-time captioning is the most inclusive choice.
Task 4
A volunteer group wants to clean the park efficiently, focusing their limited time on the areas where litter actually accumulates.
This problem requires mapping where litter actually appears. A spatial task AI can do far faster than people walking the park. Drone mapping with computer vision can identify litter hotspots, mark precise GPS locations, and show which routes are most efficient. This gives volunteers clear starting points and reduces wasted time.
Task 5
Local artists want to help the public understand the scale and impact of pollution through a powerful community art installation.
Turning environmental data into visual art helps people grasp the scale of ocean pollution intuitively. AI can convert real datasets, like waste levels or wildlife impact, into impactful images or collages, making complex information easier to understand. The artist still controls the message; AI simply expands creative options. This approach reaches wider audiences and strengthens community awareness.
END