Tag: toolkit

  • Lab Note: modelling our own use of AI tools

    Transparency label: AI-heavy


    Purpose of experiment

    To identify and configure an AI toolkit for Anapoly AI Labs that credibly models the use of general-purpose AI tools in a small consultancy setting.

    Author and date

    Alec Fearon, 24 June 2025

    Participants

    Alec Fearon, with Ray Holland and Dennis Silverwood in email consultation
    ChatGPT-4o

    Lab configuration and setup

    This setup models a real-world micro-consultancy with three collaborators. It assumes limited budget, modest technical support, and a practical orientation. We aim to reflect the toolkit choices we might recommend to participants in Anapoly AI Labs sessions.

    Preamble

    If Anapoly AI Labs is to be a credible venture, we believe it must model the behaviour it explores. That means our own internal work should demonstrate how small teams or sole traders might use AI tools in everyday tasks – writing, research, analysis, and communication – not just talk about it. This lab note outlines our proposed working configuration.

    Procedure

    We identified common functions we ourselves perform (and expect others will want to model), for example:

    • Writing, summarising, and critiquing text
    • Researching topics and checking facts
    • Extracting and organising information from documents
    • Sharing and collaborating on files
    • Managing project knowledge

    We then selected tools that:

    • Are available off the shelf
    • Require no specialist training
    • Are affordable on a small-business budget
    • Can be configured and used transparently

    Findings

    Core Tools Selected

    FunctionToolLicenceNotes
    Writing & promptingChatGPT Team£25–30/m/userMain workspace for drafting, reasoning, editing
    Search & fact-checkingPerplexity Pro$20/m/userFast, source-aware, good for validating facts
    Document interrogationNotebookLMFree (for now)Project libraries, good with PDFs and notes
    Office appsMS 365 or Google£5–15/m/userMatches common small business setups
    Visual inputsChatGPT VisionIncluded with ChatGPTUsed for images, scans, and screenshots

    Discussion of findings

    This configuration balances affordability, realism, and capability. We expect participants in Anapoly AI Labs to have similar access to these tools, or to be able to get it. By using these tools ourselves in Anapoly’s day-to-day running, we:

    • Gain first hand experience to share
    • Create reusable examples from real work
    • Expose gaps, workarounds, and lessons worth documenting

    We considered whether personal licences could be shared during lab sessions. Technically, they can’t: individual ChatGPT and Perplexity licences are for single-user use. While enforcement is unlikely, we’ve chosen to adopt the position that participants should bring their own their own AI tools – free or paid – to lab sessions as part of the learning experience. This avoids ambiguity about licencing and sets the ethical standard we want to maintain.

    Conclusions

    This toolkit would enable us to model our own small-business operations, treating Anapoly itself as one of the lab setups. That would reinforce our stance: we don’t claim to be AI experts; we’re practitioners asking the questions small businesses wish they had time to ask, and showing what happens when you do.

    Recommendations

    • Configure project workspaces in ChatGPT Team to reflect different lab contexts
    • Maintain prompt libraries and reasoning trails
    • Make costs, configurations, and limitations explicit in diary and lab notes
    • Evaluate whether to add AI-enhanced spreadsheet or knowledge tools (e.g. Notion, Obsidian) in future iterations

    Tags

    ai tools, toolkit, configuration, modelling, small business, chatgpt, perplexity, notebooklm, office software, credibility

    Glossary

    ChatGPT Team – OpenAI’s paid workspace version of ChatGPT, allowing collaboration, custom GPTs, and project folders.
    NotebookLM – A Google tool for working with uploaded documents using AI, currently free.
    Perplexity Pro – A subscription AI assistant known for showing sources.
    Vision input – The ability to upload images (photos, scans) and have the AI interpret them.