Sit down,ChatGPT, She’s Got This!

Another Woman’s Day – so what have we done. A lot, Claudia Sheinbaum was elected as Mexico’s first female president in 2024, and Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah became Namibia’s first female president in December 2024. The Paris 2024 Olympics achieved full gender parity, with an equal number of male and female athletes, and not to forget Eileen Gu and her unapologetic brilliance. We have come a long way and yet we have a long way to go.

We have definitely cracked the glass ceiling, but it’s still not broken, and let’s face it, the biggest hurdle often is ourselves. We continue to whisper about each other, we compete for the seat at the table by withholding information rather than building a bigger a table, and we even clique to ignore one. This woman’s day, be brave enough to say it, we want a village but we want to pick and choose our own.

Also, lets be brave enough to change it.

Dear woman, You wake up the sun, finish making breakfast and lunch before the house wakes up, and yet you walk into work on time, with your head held high knowing you have a mountain of work. You navigate your gender with grace and authenticity. You come home and are present emotionally for the family. This is extraordinary – This is the kind of resilience, emotional intelligence and the ability to think multidimensionally that no machine can replace.

It’s no secret, I am not exactly in love with the AI hype, and this has led me to reading a lot about it and when I say , a lot, I mean A LOT. I recently came across this article from Stimson and it got me thinking. The glass ceiling may have gone digital, and yes, the data fed to AI has a gender bias built in, that will hurt women, and maybe in the short run, women jobs will be impacted, but I refuse to accept that we will be back on the burner again. For the love of sisterhood, I continue to read and research more and I find this WSJ article by Lauren Weber – she asked AI executives what they tell their kids about careers in an AI driven world.

Read these:

“In terms of what he should study in college, I’d want him to stay as broad as possible.” -Caroline Hanke, Global head of organizational growth and health at SAP, leading internal AI workforce transformation

Ethan Mollick, author of Co-Intelligence and a professor at Wharton, is advising his teenagers away from hyper-specialization entirely. Here’s why: If your job consists of executing one specific cognitive task repeatedly, an AI agent will eventually do it faster, cheaper, and without complaining. The future belongs to bundled generalists – people who combine three or four distinct, complementary skills into a stack that’s harder to disrupt.

“Metacognitive skills will be very important—flexibility, adaptability, experimentation, thinking critically, being able to challenge things. Developing critical-thinking skills requires friction, doing things that are hard, doing deep thinking. For that, a traditional liberal-arts education is really important.” -Jaime Teevan, Chief scientist and technical fellow, Microsoft, and trustee, Yale University

“When I think about what my kids will need as they get older, it’s human qualities: the ability to relate, to empathize and be around other humans. What’s not going to be replaceable is how you treat other people, how well you communicate with them, how kind you are.” -Daniela Amodei, President and co-founder, Anthropic

The consistent message and theme is building the human skills – be alert, know how to pivot, empathy, critical thinking, adapatability, have multiple microskills … as I read this, I am like, wait, I do this everyday and so does every other woman I know. This is it ladies, CHAT GPT can sit down – ‘cos we got this. The algorithms and models can predict a digital glass ceiling, but this humble blog Shilpa’s – predicts that women will be in demand, for we have the Natural Intelligence that cannot be machined.

There is a tiny catch though – we have to walk collectively. Yup no more whispering in corridors or cliquing.

There’s an African proverb: if you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together. Professional women have been going fast — alone, exhausted, proving ourselves in isolation. It’s time to go far.

Build your village and protect it fiercely.

What does the village look like?
It looks like recommending the woman whose work you admire — even when she’s competing for the same things you are.
It looks like amplifying her ideas in the room when they get talked over.
It looks like celebrating her win without quietly wondering why it wasn’t yours.
It looks like talking to each other and not texting.
It looks like checking in on each other’s silence.
It looks like crying together – It looks like laughing together
It looks like being present – being present – being present

Let’s stop the silence,

Start the chat

Start the referral

Start the honest conversation,

Natural Intelligence – Women. Image credit – Gemini 🙂

The next wave is about women.

Let’s be in this TOGETHER.



Happy International Women’s Day!





Becoming of a Social Robot.

“Can machines think?” The iconic question in Alan Turing’s 1950 paper is the foundation of today’s Artificial Intelligence. Turing was convinced that the human body is nothing but an efficient complex machine. He then went to argue, if the human body is a machine and is programmed naturally to think, emote, empathize and rationalize can a man made machine be designed to do the same?   A century later, we now know the answer. Yes, machines can think and recognize emotions too.

The evolution of Artificial Intelligence (AI) has not been about survival of the fittest; instead it has and will continue to be about progression. From the clunky super computer to the Siri of today, AI has come a long way and makes a profound impact on businesses and our daily lives. From Google search to predicting market trends, AI is now an integral part of our daily life and it will soon be a member of our family. You can winch and deny, but it’s true. AI today is no longer limited to the factory workshops but instead is taking on a very friendly face and the era of robotic AI evolving into the era of humanoid robots.

This evolution hasn’t been easy. In 1977, George Lucas boggled our brains with the brilliance of Star Wars and the loyalty and kindness of R2D2. It has taken many failures to achieve this success but R2D2 is now a reality. Just like its ancestor R2D2, the modern social robot can follow directions, read books, take pictures, find recipes, play music, patrol your house, be a personal assistant and now can discern emotions too.

What is amusing is how receptive the world is to the idea of a social robot. If we go back only 16 years to the Y2K era this idea of a connected home might have seemed far fetched, but today when everything from the home thermostat to the security system gives live feedback the concept of a cognitive assistant and a friendly companion seems to the future of today.

The naysayers might envision a dystopia where the robot takes over mankind and pushes us into a Matrix but I see a teacher, a coach, a friend, a nurse, a companion for the elderly and most importantly a helping hand for all things human. Envision a school with social robots. Now imagine a first grade classroom with students learning to read and visualize a child who is struggling to read. A social robot designed to teach kids, can be programmed to be patient, have the best teaching strategies and most importantly will be a neutral entity to the child. A teacher can be intimidating but a robot on the contrary kindles the curious, making it the perfect learning buddy for children. Maybe this is the paradigm shift the broken education system needs.

The evolution has just begun. Social robots like Buddy, Jibo can be argued as semi-personifications of Siri because they do what a smart phone does. Their selling point is the presence of partial emotions. Jibo and Buddy giggle with you, they remind you of events and even help find recipes with a little more sophistication and good conversation whereas the smartphone is faceless. Their price point makes them even more attractive. For example, Buddy is targeted at a sale price of $649/- and Jibo can be pre-ordered for $749/-. At these easy price points, it would seem like a sure shot success but it remains to be seen if they will be a fancy toy for the early adopters or hold their ground till the laggards adopt them. Their only drawback; the social robots lack the human consciousness.

Should the robot mimic the human in appearance and consciousness? One could argue that consciousness is of the soul and not the body, so why does the social robot need a body to have a consciousness. Does it need a heart like organ? Nature articulately blended consciousness, empathy and morality in the humans, giving us the distinct advantage in the animal kingdom. Technology has made it possible for robots to recognize an emotion, but can the same robot feel the emotion too? Can robots empathize? What happens when a robot ages, will there be a robotic shelter where the elderly robots retire? Finding answers to these questions and more is the true challenge now.

Thinking is free and ironically we trust the thoughts or our gadgets more than our own intellect. While this may be amusing it is also the singular hurdle preventing the progression of the humanoids. What will happen if our own create outsmarts us? Can it? Yes it can, for it is programmed to perceive emotions, study our behavior, understand the patterns and respond in the most humane way and could possibly outdo us in our own game.

If intelligence is a spectrum then at one extreme is our belief of a universe beyond ours with extra-terrestrial intelligence and on the other extreme is the future of today; humanoid robots who can think and feel like us. Interestingly, the centrist, the human brain, is developing the extreme ends of the spectrum.

Alan Turing implanted the seed and a century later, we gave birth to the baby social robot. Will this baby mimic its parent or create a better world? It remains to be seen.

robots_quote_2