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Welcome to Ai: A Human Guide to Artificial Intelligence - Library Edition

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A fascinating guide to the rapidly advancing world of artificial intelligence and how this powerful technology will impact our lives, our careers, and our world.

Artificial intelligence is driving workforce disruption on a scale not seen since the Industrial Revolution. In schools and universities AI technology has forced a reevaluation of the way students are taught and assessed. Meanwhile, ChatGPT has become a cultural phenomenon, reaching a hundred million users and attracting a $10 billion investment in its parent company, OpenAI. The race to dominate the generative AI market is accelerating at breakneck speed, inspiring breathless headlines and immense public interest.

Welcome to AI provides a rare view into a frontier area of computer science that will change everything about how you live and work. Read this book and better understand how to succeed in the AI-enabled future.

Audio CD

Published March 5, 2024

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128 people want to read

About the author

David L. Shrier

6 books2 followers

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5 stars
22 (18%)
4 stars
32 (27%)
3 stars
43 (36%)
2 stars
18 (15%)
1 star
2 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 23 of 23 reviews
Profile Image for Bharath.
935 reviews630 followers
February 29, 2024
This book provides an introductory view of Artificial Intelligence.

As expected, the book starts with the attention chatgpt is receiving and traces the progress from the work done by Google. AI is estimated to have impacted Brexit and the US elections with some players deliberately creating chatter around the topic. Facebook he points out represented a turning point in the polarization we see in many countries today. The impact AI will have on jobs is discussed and the need for cognitive flexibility being important. Getting to Responsible AI, with adequate protection via legislation is an urgent imperative.

I found the coverage very basic in nature. I would have expected to see more content around the impact of AI across industries and job roles. The content is largely based on common sense conjecture and most opinions included do not come across as that based on expertise in the field.

Thanks to Netgalley, Harvard Business Review Press and the author for a free electronic review copy.
Profile Image for Steve Brock.
650 reviews67 followers
March 11, 2024
As Stevo’s Novel Ideas, I am a long-time book reviewer, member of the media, an Influencer, and a content provider. I received this book as a review copy from either the author, the publisher or a publicist. I have not been compensated for this recommendation. I have selected it as Stevo's Business Book of the Week for the week of 3/10, as it stands heads above other recently published books on this topic.
Profile Image for Darya.
763 reviews21 followers
January 28, 2024
One of the most engaging books about the future of humanity and artificial intelligence with interesting predit, ideas and suggestions can give you a good food for thought. There is a comprehensive overview of artificial intelligence and it's development where you can learn what it took for the technology to get to the level of today's use and ability to support humans. The storytelling in the book helps to understand the topic and learn about application scenarios for artificial intelligence technologies. There are some ideas on where the future lays and how it can influence all of us. Really thoughtful book, would recommend reading.
Profile Image for Books Tea Magic.
147 reviews7 followers
December 9, 2023
As an editor I recognize how the prominent emergence of AI over the past year has altered the world of writing. It’s fascinating to consider how AI impacts academia — and with two daughters in private New England universities it’s been interesting to watch the professors adapt and implement strategies and policies to limit the use of AI for students. This book explains the evolution while also shining a spotlight on the numerous realms AI influences that I hadn’t previously considered. It’s quite ubiquitous and it’s important to carefully consider all aspects, and enact policies while simultaneously acknowledging the previously unheard of opportunities AI presents. Hence the reason I read this book. It’s academic for sure, but not only is it a worthwhile read, I feel it’s imperative for us to learn as much as we can about AI to better understand what’s happening now and what's coming.
1 review
January 30, 2024
Overall the flow of the book, chapters and subchapters is lacking logical connections. It feels more like a collection of high-level generic thoughts put on paper hardly supported by research or science in this field (although the number of papers on this subject is actually quite intense).
To the specifics, if you are looking for a book to better understand AI technologies, this is not the right book for you. The author lightly touched about the "history of AI" by depicting a incomplete landscape of the different AI technologies and models. When I say light touch understand really barely surfaced.
Then each chapter is a bit unsubstantial and depicts the abstract author's point of view on how AI could change the future of the corporate state. What was a bit puzzling for me is that most of author "forward" looking view was actually describing a present state rather than future view.
Finally, on a more positive note, which is actually the reason why I gave it at least two stars, the book was easy to read although not really informative in my point of view. In conclusion I am glad I was able to access it for free in the library rather than buying it
Profile Image for Jason Wrench.
Author 29 books34 followers
April 16, 2024
Welcome to AI: A Human Guide to Artificial Intelligence by David L. Shrier is a quick introduction to the world of artificial intelligence and its place in the modern organization. As a social scientist in organizational communication and artificial intelligence, I was really excited to read this book.

The book itself is a really good introduction for people who are looking to understand the current role that generative AI plays in the modern workplace and what role AI in general may play in the business of tomorrow.

I think Shrier takes a balanced approach to the topic, but I’m sure some of the AI doomers will see his depiction of the positive and negative aspects of AI as being a bit rosy.

If you are looking for a book on how to really use AI in the nitty gritty of machine learning and training AI models as a computer scientist, this book is not for you.

I want to thank the publisher for the opportunity to review this book prior to publication. Although I am thankful for the opportunity, the review is completely mine. I also ended up buying the audio book, which I found enjoyable.
214 reviews1 follower
September 25, 2025
📖 Welcome to AI: A Human Guide to Artificial Intelligence by David L. Shrier

This book isn’t long—just about 200 pages—so some readers will breeze through it in a few hours (a little nod to those who always brag about how fast they read).

More importantly, it’s an excellent source for students and those entering the workforce who want to understand the tools AI offers, including generative AI. Shrier does a good job not just of explaining what AI can do, but of showing how to “learn to learn” in an age where technology keeps changing.

The book closes with some futurist ideas about building a world that uses AI responsibly, with a thoughtful look at the role of government funding and policy in shaping technological development.

Verdict: A short, clear, and practical introduction—especially useful for anyone at the start of their career or studies who wants a grounding in AI’s possibilities and challenges.
Profile Image for Dimitri.
214 reviews2 followers
April 29, 2024
📕 Why (Not) to read this book (Target Audience)

Interesting human centric approach.

👀 How this book changed my daily live (Takeaways)

1. Job evolution & displacement is Human + AI
2. Knowledge is a commodoty
3. Threats of Ai in ethics
a. Bias / halucination
b. Copyright / Intelectual Property


⁉ Spoiler Alerts (Highlights)

Expert systems -> Q&A programmed by humans -> structured data
Machine Learning systems -> Trained on large volumes of data

Data
1. Structured
2. Unstructured

Learning
1. Supervised -> recaptcha
2. Umsupervised -> statistical grouping

Evolution
1. Neural networks
2. Deep learning -> layered neural networks
3. Generative AI -> Predictive
4. AGI -> Artificial General Intelligence
Profile Image for Anthony Deluca.
48 reviews2 followers
March 6, 2025
This is an excellent book explaining the past, present, and future of AI. The author has their own perspective but also highlights facts and other views, some complimentary and some opposing. This book will quickly become somewhat obsolete (Bard referenced which has already been changed to be called Gemini) so I hope the author publishes updated editions in the coming years. I liked this book so much I will be looking at other books by the same author on other topics.
Profile Image for Greg Hawod.
367 reviews
February 1, 2024
This book provides useful insights about AI and how to navigate the world as this technology becomes more integrated in our lives. Readers will find ways on how we can augment this tech to our daily activities. It also provides sone advice on what we should do to defend ourselves against disruption.
Profile Image for Matthew Gregory.
3 reviews
June 29, 2024
It was definitely a scratch on the surface book. Not a lot of resources and in depth information. Mainly speculation and theory with some useful info but little that I have not heard elsewhere. But most of what's in here I have already heard on the popular media. Good read for someone with zero info on AI for sure.
Profile Image for Ricardo Urresti.
206 reviews3 followers
August 5, 2024
The author presents a standard structure for a book on the AI Theme: history, technology, ethics, impact on society - a good summary in a nutshell. On the other hand, opinions are debatable, as there are other standpoints that readers should take in consideration. Not a definitive book, but a fair overview.
Profile Image for Jitendra Vishen.
56 reviews
November 1, 2024
This book talks about the impact of AI in our life. From bots impacting democratic elections to producing test results of a new drug. You name the industry and the AI impact will be there.

I think this book is easy to read and understand. even if you are not a technical person and not a computer savvy you should be able to understand.

I rate this book 5/5.
Profile Image for Lindsey Hartsfield.
2 reviews
August 9, 2025
Really enjoyed this book! “Welcome to AI” is an easy, engaging read that breaks down artificial intelligence in a way anyone can follow. If you’re already in tech, most of it will feel very familiar, but it’s still a fun and thoughtful take. Shrier’s clear explanations and approachable style make it both enjoyable and insightful. A five star read for anyone who’s curious about AI!
67 reviews1 follower
November 19, 2024
Shrier is an academic at Imperial and Oxford with various private sector involvements. This book doesn’t add much: the ‘history of AI’ section is brief, technical aspects are glossed over, the societal impacts are unoriginal – there are many better books on AI out there.
21 reviews
May 29, 2025
Comprehensive and insightful, the author describes the mechanics of AI, the dangers of AI (with real-world evidence, not just science fiction), and a glimmer of hope for industries that are likely to be demolished by AI over the next 20 years.
Profile Image for Rolf.
4,042 reviews14 followers
June 1, 2025
A solid introduction to the most urgent issues facing the use of AI technology in the creative professions, especially the academy. It is rather introductory in nature, and the author is a bit more optimistic about the future than I am, but it was still very helpful and useful.
Profile Image for Lowell.
206 reviews10 followers
September 22, 2025
I'm a fan of most HBR literature I come across, and found this a sufficiently useful introduction to emerging AI. Had to push myself to finish this, so as a reading experience it didn't do it for me. But, yes, useful for the average professional who should be aware of an emerging technology that they (I) need to better utilize in their (my) career.
Displaying 1 - 23 of 23 reviews

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