- Let’s dig into specifics.
- The way you speak to people who don’t understand technology is different from the way you speak to people who do.
- When explaining what you want to do to someone who understands technology, don’t look at articles on the Internet “for people who don’t understand technology” and copy them.
- Those articles don’t tell the detailed story of “how it was accomplished.” That’s because “non-technical readers” don’t want that information.
- Instead, we use words (buzzwords) that even “non-technical readers” know and that have an air of new technology. The most popular word of the past few years has been “artificial intelligence.
- I saw a proposal that said, “I will solve this problem with artificial intelligence! I saw a proposal that said, “Artificial Intelligence to solve this problem! That’s amazing! I don’t think, “Wow! I think, “How exactly is it going to do that?” I think, “How exactly is it going to be done?
- Since you are the one who will do this project, you must be able to explain “what exactly you will do starting tomorrow”.
- Equivalent to Type 1 of Type-specific advice for contest applicants, common story
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