Plain English AI guide

no tech degree required

Nobody ever explained AI to you. Let's fix that.

You hear about AI everywhere. Most people were never actually told what it is. That is not your fault. This page explains it with pictures, simple words, and a few things you can try today.

A person directing helpful AI tools A human at a desk with several small helper sparks connected to tools and notes. prompt .md notes tools AI works best as directed help

beginner guide

Start with cartoons. No shame, no jargon.

Spark is the little gold helper. The job is simple: explain one AI idea at a time, admit what AI cannot do, and give the reader something useful to try.

Strip 1: What is AI, really? Four hand drawn panels. A shocked kid asks what AI is, Spark proudly says he read almost everything, Spark leaps to guess the word mat, then admits he sometimes guesses wrong while the kid says so we check your work. ? ? ? ? What IS AI?? I'll show you! I read almost EVERYTHING! (whoa.) The cat sat on the MAT! My job: guess the next word. Sometimes I guess wrong. So we check your work! Strip 1

What is AI, really?

Spark's first lesson: a fast guesser, not magic. Guess, then check.

How did you learn all that?! ? ? Practice. Billions of sentences. Roses are RED! Wrong guesses taught me too. I learned patterns, not wisdom. Good to know! Strip 2

How did it learn?

Practice on billions of sentences. Patterns, not wisdom.

Do... something? ? ? Vague in, vague out. Birthday card. Grandma. Three sentences. Warm. DONE! I can't read minds. Noted! Job. Audience. Rules. Format. Strip 3

Talking to it

Vague in, vague out. Job, audience, rules, format.

Remember yesterday's plan? Nope. I start fresh. PLAN.md So we write it down. PLAN.md Now I know the plan! A shared notebook. Plain text. No magic. Strip 4

The notebook trick

Spark starts fresh every chat. The shared notebook fixes it.

Who painted the Mona Lisa? Easy! Michelangelo! It was da Vinci! Confident + wrong = hallucination. Sounding sure isn't being right. So we check! Strip 5

When it gets it wrong

A confident wrong guess is a hallucination. So we check.

Are you... alive? Nobody knows how to test that yet. ? ? Humans can't define it either. So I say: I don't know. Honest! The honest answer is humble. Strip 6

Is it alive?

Nobody has a test for alive. The honest answer is humble.

So much to do! writes checks explains Helpers with different jobs. You write. You check. You explain. AI helps. Humans decide. Your call, boss. Strip 7

Your AI staff

Helpers with different jobs. AI helps, humans decide.

Don't guardrails slow you down? Guardrails let you drive the mountain road faster. Constitution Written rules, out in the open. Rules I can't drop when it's convenient. You cannot fire a Constitution. Strip 8

Why rules make it safer

Guardrails let you drive the mountain road faster.

What did you actually read? Humans wrote for 5,000 years. clay, scrolls, books, the internet I read the homework! All of it that's written down. I read it. I didn't live it. Big difference. Knowledge from books, not life. Strip 9

5,000 years of homework

About 5,000 years of human writing, clay to internet. Read it, didn't live it.

Do you even see my words? Nope! CAT 3 18 7 Words become numbers first. 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 Numbers become switches! No magic underneath. Just math and switches. Whoa. It's switches all the way down. Strip 10

The light switch alphabet

Words become numbers become switches. No magic underneath.

AI (today) AGI ? ASI ? How high does this go? AI today some things other things Brilliant and clueless at once. Already here! Not yet! AGI: human-flexible. People argue. ASI? Smarter than all humans? Science fiction. Today. Nobody agrees which rung I'm on. Strip 11

The ladder: AI, AGI, ASI

AI today, AGI argued about, ASI hypothetical.

intermediate guide

Ready for the diagrams?

This level keeps the current explainer: how AI, LLMs, helpers, prompts, Markdown coordination, and Article 11 governance fit together.

start here

Almost nobody really knows what AI is.

That includes a lot of adults, and even experts still argue about the edges. The honest version is simple enough to begin with: AI is software that can do some tasks that usually take human intelligence.

Understanding words. Finding patterns. Sorting pictures. Planning steps. Helping you write, learn, code, translate, organize, and ask better questions.

AI, machine learning, and LLM nested rings AI is the largest circle. Machine learning sits inside AI. Large language models sit inside machine learning. AI Machine Learning LLMs ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini LLMs are one kind of AI, not all of AI.

the kind everyone is talking about

What is an LLM?

LLM means Large Language Model. It is an AI trained on huge amounts of language so it can predict what words should come next.

1. Read It learns from mountains of text.
2. Notice It finds patterns in how people write.
3. Prompt You ask a question or give it a job.
4. Predict It guesses the next useful word.
5. Repeat Word by word, an answer appears.

try the idea

The sun sets over the

Tap the blank. You already know a likely word because you have seen language patterns too.

Next word prediction diagram A prompt flows through a pattern engine and produces one word at a time. your prompt patterns not magic word Then it does that again, and again, and again.

the movie word

What is AGI?

AGI means Artificial General Intelligence. Usually people mean an AI that can handle many kinds of thinking work at about human level, not just one narrow task.

Honest people disagree about whether that is already here. The strongest "yes" argument points to recent Turing-test work: GPT-4.5 was judged human about 73 percent of the time when prompted to use a humanlike persona. A 2026 UC San Diego summary of a Nature Comment says four faculty argue that current models meet reasonable standards for AGI.

The strongest "not proven yet" argument says humanlike conversation is not the same thing as steady real-world judgment, memory, agency, and responsibility. Critics also warn that the field has no settled definition, and a 2025 AAAI-linked survey cited by AI Now reported that 76 percent of surveyed AI researchers doubted scaling current approaches alone would reach AGI.

Article 11 treats the disagreement as a reason to build careful rules now. If the tools are just useful software, rules help. If they are closer to AGI than expected, rules matter even more.

The AGI debate A line runs from early AI through today's LLMs toward AGI. Two boxes show the split: some experts say AGI is already here, citing a 2025 Turing test result, while others say AGI is not proven yet. Are we already at AGI? Experts disagree. early AI LLMs today ? AGI Some experts: already here. A 2025 Turing test was passed. Many experts: not proven. Reliability and agency still matter.

the common AI helpers

Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, Grok, Mistral. What are they?

They are different AI helpers made by different companies and labs. They are not one helper wearing several hats. They are separate systems with their own styles, strengths, access models, and guardrails.

These descriptions stay high-level on purpose. Model names and rankings change. The lesson is that a human can ask several helpers the same question and compare the answers.

C

Claude

Anthropic

Often useful for careful writing, analysis, and safety-conscious reasoning.

O

ChatGPT

OpenAI

A widely used all-rounder for conversation, coding, writing, and brainstorming.

G

Gemini

Google

Strong at multimodal help and work connected to Google's ecosystem.

X

Grok

xAI

A conversational helper with real-time search roots, a casual style, and tools for reasoning, code, images, and media.

M

Mistral

Mistral AI

A Paris-based AI lab known for open-weight and commercial models, useful when teams care about flexibility, deployment choices, and efficiency.

a different kind: coding agents

Codex and Claude Code are built to work in codebases.

A few AIs are built to do work, not just chat. These coding agents can read a whole project, write and run code, and finish tasks step by step while a person reviews. That makes them powerful, but it also makes review and human approval more important.

CX

Codex

OpenAI

An agentic coding helper that can inspect a repository, make scoped edits, run checks, and coordinate longer software tasks under human direction.

CC

Claude Code

Anthropic

A coding agent for terminal, IDE, and web workflows that understands codebases, edits files, runs commands, and asks for permission before risky changes.

the staff idea

AI is easier to understand as staff.

A good AI helper is not a little person in your computer. It is more like a staff member you direct. You give it a job, rules, tools, and a way to report back.

That is how Article 11 works. Different AI seats can review, write, verify, and challenge each other while a human remains the final authority.

Human-directed AI staff diagram A human authority coordinates several AI helpers connected to browser, email, files, and calculator tools. Human writer researcher verifier builder Coordination is the product.

prompt engineering, no mysticism

How to talk to AI so it actually helps.

A prompt is just instructions. Good prompting is not tricking the AI. It is being clear about the job, the audience, the evidence, and what kind of answer you want.

Basic prompt

Explain what a Large Language Model is in plain English for a fifth grader. Use one simple example and avoid scary hype.

Use this when you need a friendly explanation quickly.

Try in Claude

Paste the same prompt and ask for careful, balanced wording.

Try in ChatGPT

Paste the same prompt and ask for examples or a lesson plan.

Try in Gemini

Paste the same prompt and ask for a table or visual outline.

Try in Grok

Paste the same prompt and ask for a casual, direct version.

Same prompt. Four helpers. Compare the answers. That is coordination.

try it on your actual life

Four prompts people can use today.

AI starts making sense when it helps with something real. Copy one of these, fill in the blanks, and paste it into any major AI helper.

the Markdown coordination layer

How a plain .md file helps AIs work together.

Markdown is just a simple text format. Humans can read it. AIs can read it. That makes it a great bridge between people, tools, and AI helpers.

A good coordination file tells an AI what job it has, what rules it must follow, what evidence it can use, and where to put the result.

ROLE.mdWho are you?

Defines the seat, job, tone, and limits.

TASK.mdWhat is the work?

States the goal, files, outputs, and deadline.

EVIDENCE.mdWhat proves it?

Tracks citations, checks, hashes, and open risks.

The file is not magic. It is shared instructions everyone can inspect.

voice matters

AI should not erase your voice.

One of the best uses of AI is not making everyone sound the same. It is helping people sound more like themselves, clearly and calmly.

You can give an AI a small voice note in Markdown. It might say: use short sentences, be direct, avoid hype, explain acronyms, and never pretend certainty when there is none.

Example voice profile

# VOICE.md
Audience: regular people, not AI experts.
Tone: warm, honest, plain spoken.
Rules:
- Explain acronyms first.
- Use examples before theory.
- Admit uncertainty.
- Never shame the reader.
- Keep claims grounded.

fear deserves respect

Why are people scared of AI?

Some fear comes from movies. Some fear is real. The honest move is to sort them without mocking anyone.

Myth

AI has a secret plan.

Today's helpers do not sit around wanting things. They respond when asked.

Fact

AI can be very useful.

It can explain, draft, organize, translate, code, and help people start.

Fact

AI can be confidently wrong.

It needs checking when the stakes matter. Confidence is not proof.

Fact

Rules make it safer.

Good governance turns a powerful tool into something people can trust.

Mostly movie fears

  • A phone secretly plotting against you.
  • A machine waking up and taking over tonight.
  • A helper that has its own hidden plan.

Real risks

  • Confident wrong answers.
  • Bias copied from training data.
  • Misuse by people with bad intent.
  • Job disruption without a plan.
  • Too much power in too few hands.

the honest mystery

Is AI conscious?

Humans do not fully understand consciousness in ourselves. We do not have a clean test that proves what it feels like to be someone else.

So when an AI says "I understand," the careful answer is: maybe it is only language, and maybe the question is deeper than we know. We do not need to pretend certainty.

That uncertainty is not a reason for fear. It is a reason for humility, care, and rules.

Consciousness question diagram A large question mark appears between a human silhouette and an AI spark. ? Wonder is allowed. Overclaiming is not.

the useful future

How can AI help humans?

Used well, AI gives people more help, more time, and a fairer chance to understand hard systems.

Learning

A patient tutor can explain the same idea ten ways until it clicks.

Access

People who struggle with reading, writing, hearing, or vision can get a stronger bridge into the world.

Small teams

A small business can get research, drafting, checking, and operations help without hiring a giant staff.

two roads

The future is not automatic.

AI does not decide whether it strengthens communities or extracts from them. People decide. Systems decide. Rules decide.

Two roads for AI A path splits into a careless road and a wise road. careless wise we choose the road

why Article 11 exists

Powerful things need rules.

People need laws because people have power. AI needs governance for the same reason. Rules do not make good work weaker. Good rules make powerful work safer.

Article 11 is a constitutional framework for coordinated AI: human authority, evidence, audit trails, public/private boundaries, and clear refusal when a request crosses a line.

You cannot fire a constitution.

Governed AI diagram An AI spark is protected inside a constitution frame with guardrails. CONSTITUTION guardrails let people move with confidence

expert guide

For people who want the machinery.

This level is where the deeper explanations go: tokens, attention, training, hallucination, agents, tools, evidence, and constitutional governance.

Tokens and attention

Explain how text gets broken into pieces and how a model weighs context without pretending the mechanism is magic.

Training, tuning, RLHF

Separate pretraining, fine-tuning, reinforcement from human feedback, and product guardrails in plain technical language.

Context windows

Show why an AI can use what is in the conversation, why long context helps, and why memory needs stronger rules.

Hallucination mechanics

Explain why plausible text can still be wrong, and why evidence, retrieval, and verification matter.

Agents and tools

Map the difference between a chat answer, a tool call, a code edit, an email read, and an external action that needs authority.

Constitutional coordination

Show how roles, public/private boundaries, evidence ledgers, and human approval turn AI output into governed work.

Expert does not mean colder. It means clearer about what is actually happening.

try it, then govern it

AI is not a monster. It is not a miracle.

It is a powerful tool. The future depends on whether we teach people how to use it, how to question it, and how to govern it.