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‘AI did my school project. It took me an hour rather than a week'

‘AI did my school project. It took me an hour rather than a week'

Many EU schools are introducing ChatGPT in the classroom, but is it a lazy way of fact-finding or writing essays? One student I spoke to doesn't think so
Today at 21:30
Should Ireland follow other EU countries in rolling out ChatGPT in secondary school classrooms? That may be on the cards, according to reports this week.
On one level, the idea seems odd. Doesn't generative AI fly against the principles of basic, intuitive learning? Isn't it just a lazy, decadent way of outsourcing essays and fact-finding?

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UK citizens face fingerprint checks each time they visit EU
UK citizens face fingerprint checks each time they visit EU

Irish Examiner

timea day ago

  • Irish Examiner

UK citizens face fingerprint checks each time they visit EU

British citizens who travel frequently to the EU face having their fingerprints individually checked each time they cross the border into the Schengen area because of delays in developing an app to verify biometrics digitally, it has emerged. It will be 'business as usual' this summer but 'a big change' in travel will be phased in from November, Doug Bannister, the chief executive of the Port of Dover has said. 'Significant infrastructure' including reclaiming 13 hectares of land in the Port of Dover to handle passengers getting out of cars and buses has been put in place to try to minimise disruption, Bannister said. Under the system being built, all car passengers will have to get out of their vehicle to be individually fingerprinted and photographed. On every subsequent journey, a fingerprint or a facial image will be verified along with passport number, in a major shift designed to get rid of 'wet stamping' and allow the number of days British visitors stay in the EU in any given year to be automatically recorded. It is envisaged that an app that can be installed on a border force tablet can be passed into the car for verification of each individual's biometrics. Frontex, the European border agency, has developed the app, but confirmed it was up to each member state to implement its use. 'We have been told that any app won't be ready any time before November, but hopefully it could come swiftly after that,' said Bannister. '[It means] second, third, fourth time travellers still need to have a biometric captured at the border,' he said, meaning passengers will still have to get out of their vehicle for border checks until the app is ready. The port prides itself on the speed with which it operates. Bannister says it can load and off-load a ferry 'with 120 trucks, 1,000 passengers and a couple of hundred cars in 45 minutes, faster than an A320 at Gatwick'. He is confident the biometric check regime being built will add just six minutes to a car journey. The new regime has presented particular challenges in Dover because the port is hemmed by the cliffs and there is no safe space for car passengers to be checked amid the flow of 10,000 trucks a day crossing the channel. 'In an airport you have a nice, air-conditioned, well-lit hall, and an orderly queue of foot passengers going through. But we needed to cater for a carload of four people on a large, stormy night. So we couldn't have people exit their vehicles [in the ferry queues]. That would be dangerous.' In an extraordinary solution supported by the UK and French governments, Dover will create a virtual frontier system, 1.4 miles across town for border checks on 12 hectares of reclaimed land. Peering down from the western cliffs, the first building to cater for coaches is already in place on a vast swathe of built-up ground currently topped with golden sand. A second bus and a separate car building will be installed in the coming months. To ensure the integrity of the border, buses will have their doors physically sealed with tape while they rejoin regular traffic across Dover town and continue a 1.4-mile journey from the western ferry to board the ferry at the eastern docks. Irregular movements between the biometric border and the ferry board will be monitored by a combination of AI and automatic number plate recognition. It isn't the only change Bannister is expecting in the coming months. He is also hopeful that the reset in the relationship between the UK and the EU will end the environmentally and economically damaging issue of trucks returning to the continent empty. Another byproduct of Brexit, it is estimated that on some days 30% to 40% of trucks have no cargo on them when they return to the continent because of strict checks on fresh food and farm products. These are expected to be scrapped as part of Keir Starmer's reset. With £144bn worth of goods traded over the channel every year, the Port of Dover is of critical economic interest to France and the UK, representing half of the total of UK goods exported to Europe, Bannister said. The EU and the UK have pledged to negotiate a new deal eliminating the checks on food, which will allow small food and farm producers to export to Europe once again. Read More Trump gives Elon Musk an Oval Office send-off

Anthem Vinyl offering 'interesting new approach' to vinyl pressing for artists
Anthem Vinyl offering 'interesting new approach' to vinyl pressing for artists

Irish Daily Mirror

timea day ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Anthem Vinyl offering 'interesting new approach' to vinyl pressing for artists

Newly launched Anthem Vinyl, Ireland's only vinyl pressing plant, are offering an 'interesting new approach' to vinyl pressing for Irish artists. Born out of a shared love for vinyl and a deep respect for its craft, Anthem Vinyl was founded in 2024 by a team of passionate music industry and business professionals. Located just 30 minutes from Dublin, in Clane, County Kildare, the new pressing plant is embracing new technology, sustainability, and accessibility, ensuring that artists and fans can experience vinyl at its best. 'Obviously, a lot of Irish artists would be keen to have their physical music produced here in Ireland,' Anthem Vinyl founder Brian Kenny told the Irish Mirror. 'It's also very accessible, they can come here, visit the plant. We offer that anyone who's getting records pressed can come in and see it getting pressed, shoot some social content. 'We're building out a media room here where, if they want to shoot their own social media content in the room, listen to it on the Hi Fi, and sign copies of it.' Brian says by pressing locally in Ireland, clients benefit from faster lead times and lower shipping costs thanks to Ireland's unique position within the EU. 'It's that unique access that we have to the global market. Even though we will do everything we can to support Irish acts, we don't want to create the impression we're only supporting Irish acts either.' 'Because the Irish industry is not big enough to sustain this business or any pressing plant,' he added. 'It's probably mostly led by artists not having to go far afield, Irish in particular, to get their pressings. 'But we also think we can tick a box for UK and European-based artists to get their product out to the States in particular, or UK artists to get their products into mainland Europe.' With the addition of traditional pressing services, Anthem has also introduced Smart Vinyl, a forward-thinking innovation that pairs physical records with the digital world. 'It's a very early product. Declan O'Rourke's album was done; he's an early adopter of it,' he shared. 'It gives a great new level of engagement between an artist and a fan. That they have this content that's utterly unique to that particular album, that they bought that vinyl record. 'Then the artist, in turn, can have visibility of fans that are buying records and binder releases. And there's opportunities there for early concert ticket access or early new release access to fans that are showing loyalties to them. It's a very interesting kind of new approach to it.'

‘AI did my school project. It took me an hour rather than a week'
‘AI did my school project. It took me an hour rather than a week'

Irish Independent

timea day ago

  • Irish Independent

‘AI did my school project. It took me an hour rather than a week'

Many EU schools are introducing ChatGPT in the classroom, but is it a lazy way of fact-finding or writing essays? One student I spoke to doesn't think so Today at 21:30 Should Ireland follow other EU countries in rolling out ChatGPT in secondary school classrooms? That may be on the cards, according to reports this week. On one level, the idea seems odd. Doesn't generative AI fly against the principles of basic, intuitive learning? Isn't it just a lazy, decadent way of outsourcing essays and fact-finding?

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