Our initial idea, prompted by Kamil Banc’s writing on practical AI use, was to run a small, local club. Somewhere people like us could meet in person, experiment with ChatGPT, and see what we could actually do with it. A “non-threatening, friendly environment,” we called it at the time.
But the concept developed, and the name seemed too cosy. A reference to Google Labs brought up the idea of a lab as a place to experiment with tools and ideas. This resonated, so we pivoted to thinking of ourselves not as conveners of a club but as facilitators of a sandbox: a safe space to try things out and see what works.
Our sandbox would be friendly and exploratory, but with a clear purpose: to model the use of general-purpose AI tools in everyday working environments. It would enable a number of labs, each modelling a different working situation, where we could try things out, see what helps and what doesn’t, and work out how to get better results.
Hence Anapoly AI Labs: one sandbox, many lab setups.
sandbox: a safe play area where computer programs can be used without affecting the operational system; useful for experimenting with or testing new software.