Tags: information foraging*

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  1. This article examines how "vibe coding" – using LLMs to rapidly generate custom software – is transforming sensemaking and data visualization. Previously, bespoke tools demanded significant engineering resources or platform knowledge.

    However, the emergence of AI has lowered these barriers, allowing users to create "disposable" interactive tools tailored to specific research tasks.

    This empowers non-experts as "directors of design," but the author cautions against mindless trial-and-error, emphasizing the difference between exploratory tools for finding truth and classic visualizations for explaining it.
  2. This article discusses how to conduct long-term research effectively using AI as a partner, moving beyond single-prompt queries. It emphasizes the need for "Long-Term Triangulation" – a continuous, iterative methodology. The author outlines four key pillars: building a persistent memory for the AI, tracking shifts in the AI's understanding, actively critiquing its responses with contradictory data, and performing meta-audits to identify blind spots in the research process. The goal is to foster productive friction and avoid intellectual echo chambers, ensuring both the human and the AI think critically.
  3. This article discusses how AI tools can be used to enhance the reading experience by providing instant access to information and background details, similar to using a dictionary or Wikipedia, but with the ability to ask more complex questions. The author shares personal examples of using AI while reading 'The Dark Forest' and other books to clarify plot points and gain a better understanding of the material.
  4. A review of the SearchResearch blog's 2025 posts, highlighting a shift towards AI-augmented research methods, testing AI tools, and emphasizing the importance of verification and critical thinking in online research.
  5. This article details a method for finding books on your shelves using Gemini's text recognition capabilities. The author describes how taking pictures of bookshelves and using AI to scan them can help locate lost books and even provide insights into reading habits.
  6. An analysis of the quality of AI-generated summaries of a technical paper, comparing outputs from Gemini, ChatGPT, Claude, Grok, Perplexity, and NotebookLM. The author finds Gemini to be the best, highlighting the importance of context in prompting and the potential usefulness of AI summaries as 'extended abstracts'.

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