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a lot, depending on the use case. If you can master prompts, you can impress.</p><p id="f527">Particularly impressive results can currently be achieved with, for example, the text to image AI like from <a href="https://www.adobe.com/sensei/generative-ai/firefly.html">Adobe Firefly</a>, <a href="https://www.midjourney.com/">Midjourney</a> or even <a href="https://go.lsww.de/canva-pro">Canva</a>.</p><figure id="0dea"><img src="https://cdn-images-1.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:800/1*g1QZgQU3-m2Zx6hfdpZPmQ.jpeg"><figcaption>Short prompt with amazing results from Adobe Firefly´s text-to-image AI. Created by Author with Adobe Firefly.</figcaption></figure><p id="fe65">In other places, entire blog posts are generated with AI.</p><h1 id="4d3e">So what use cases do we really see in business?</h1><p id="0f35">It’s really impressive what AI technology can do now. However, with all the possibilities, the question of meaningful uses always remains for me.</p><h2 id="4013">Example 1: Images</h2><p id="cc1a">In my everyday life as a blogger, I often create images, e.g., cover images for blog posts or YouTube videos. So far I’ve used Canva for this, specifically a mixture of templates and the simple user interface, which make it possible for me as a non-designer to incorporate basic rules of aesthetics, and actually make images usable.</p><p id="ab39">Just because I can now create stunning images with Adobe Firefly and Midjourney, I don’t yet see a use case other than writing about making great images.</p><p id="e5d2">Then there is the question of copyright. Who is the copyright holder? AI or Prompt Writer? Or no one? Can AI have any rights at all?</p><p id="63b7"><b>Use cases could be useful for photographers or graphic designers, where AI helps to improve image quality. This could be removing an unwanted object in the image, enhancing content for specific formats, improving light and color, etc.</b></p><h2 id="3c77">Example 2: Audio</h2><p id="3f76">With audio AI, this approach becomes even clearer. If you are not a professional musician and are in a creative hiatus, you don’t need new beats or suitable lyrics.</p><p id="42cd"><b>However, it could be exciting if we use AI to improve the quality of our podcasts, remove noise in videos, or perhaps automatically add jingles or sound effects to videos to make them more entertaining.</b></p><h2 id="829f">Example 3: Text</h2><p id="ff5b">As a blogger, I am particularly critical when it comes to text creation. Anyone who writes texts online is trying to achieve SEO success or improve conversions through better product descriptions. These are all legitimate goals, and there are many tools that support them, e.g.</p><ul><li><a href="https://openai.com/blog/chatgpt">ChatGPT</a></li><li><a href="https://go.lsww.de/neuroflash">Neuroflash</a></li><li><a href="https://www.craftly.ai/">Craftly.ai</a></li><li><a href="https://copymate.app/">Copymate</a></li><li><a href="https://go.lsww.de/jasper">Jasper</a>*</li><li><a href="https://autowrite.app/">Autowrite</a></li><li><a href="https://textcortex.com/">text.cortex</a></li></ul><p id="14c3">My criticism with all tools, however, is the lack of originality. They say that people like to buy from people. In the online world, you could adapt the tagline a bit and say:</p><p id="07c6" type="7">People like to buy from trustworthy brands that they can identify well with.</p><p id="80f9">A brand with which you can identify well as a customer and as a human being! AI does the exact opposite. Even if AI texts are instructive in terms of content or even factually correct, the question of originality remains.</p><p id="1be6">So instead of formulating a text themselves and accommodating their own opinions and tone, many try to improve their prompt writing skills instead. All with the goal of compensating for

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their own writing weaknesses and creating more results in less time (AI as a productivity booster).</p><p id="a57c">Even if Google can currently be fooled with this, it becomes difficult with humans, especially with journalistic content. An AI text may be created faster than one written by hand. But it will never have the personality that a human can put into a text — regardless of the topic.</p><p id="bf2e"><b>From my point of view useful text AI can help to improve handwritten texts. For example, if you have a spelling weakness, use tools like <a href="https://www.deepl.com/write">DeepL Write</a> or the Chrome extension <a href="https://languagetool.org/">LanguageTool</a>. If SEO texts are not your strong point, have a text checked and optimized by AI software. Do the same, if you find it difficult to get to the point.</b></p><h2 id="6e87">Example 4: Video</h2><p id="0777">There is AI that can create videos! Whether for reels, YouTube, online courses and more. But video is one of the formats that conveys the most personality. After all, there is usually a human being in front of the camera.</p><p id="64d4"><b>Instead of relying on video generators, I see use cases in the post-production of videos. There are applications that can, for example, automatically cut videos or extract content from long videos into short snippets. The content here basically remains an original, but the work afterwards becomes much more efficient.</b></p><h1 id="9fae">The big opportunity: Be the original, stay the original</h1><p id="a193">With all the possibilities that AI opens up for us in our everyday lives, I also see, above all, a great opportunity for those who create content.</p><p id="0104">Instead of trying to do what everyone else is doing, everyone should try to stand out through individuality and personality. No one is helped if the professional world becomes a more homogeneous soup of experts. Instead, keep reminding yourself that people want to buy from other people. Be the original, be the brand.</p><p id="4943">Also, don’t use AI to generate content for you. If, let it help you compensate for weaknesses (e.g., writing or creative weaknesses) or to make repetitive post-production tasks easier (e.g., video editing, SEO optimization). Think of AI as an assistant that improves YOUR work, but doesn’t replace it.</p><p id="7a08">Like this post? Subscribe to my profile:</p><div id="8295" class="link-block"> <a href="https://medium.com/@christhaefner/subscribe"> <div> <div> <h2>Get an email whenever Christian Häfner publishes.</h2> <div><h3>Get an email whenever Christian Häfner publishes. By signing up, you will create a Medium account if you don't already…</h3></div> <div><p>medium.com</p></div> </div> <div> <div style="background-image: url(https://miro.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:320/0*Be1NcBUefI3NLHKN)"></div> </div> </div> </a> </div><div id="6056" class="link-block"> <a href="https://medium.com/@christhaefner/membership"> <div> <div> <h2>Join Medium with my referral link</h2> <div><h3>Read every story from me and thousands of other writers on Medium. </h3></div> <div><p>medium.com</p></div> </div> <div> <div style="background-image: url(https://miro.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:320/0*KoRh5y_r3K1W1XGC)"></div> </div> </div> </a> </div><p id="82f3"><b>Disclaimer</b> Links with * are Affiliate Links. If you follow that link and make a purchase, the author will be rewarded by the company. This has no impact for customers.</p></article></body>

Sparta: Where Heroines Outshine Their Valiant Heroes

7 lessons and why pacifists must read Steven Pressfield’s Gates of Fire

Photo by Joel Muniz on Unsplash

Steven Pressfield’s Gates of Fire — The Epic Battle of Thermopylae is a historical fiction that retells the world changing battle between Persia, led by king Xerxes I, and the Greek city states, led by Sparta under their king, Leonidas I.

The war film, 300, is based on the ancient epic battle of Thermopylae. King Leonidas and 300 Spartans warriors led the Greeks against the onslaughts of a formidably massive Persian army. The odds were massively stacked against the Greeks. Despite insurmountable odds, the Greek ward off their enemies for several days until their fellow Spartan, chaffing at being declared unfit for battle betrayed his nation to the Persians.

The Spartans and their Thespian allies died to the last man, but the standard of valor they set by their sacrifice inspired the Greeks to rally and, in that fall and spring, defeat the Persians at Salamis and Plataea and preserve the beginnings of Western democracy and freedom from perishing in the cradle.

Prior to the Persian invasion the Greek city states recently ended a civil war in the city of Antirhion. The goal of that war was to unite all the contending Greek city states again their common looming and seemingly insurmountable enemy, Persia.

In the third year after the battle of Antirhion, king Darius of Persia died, and his son succeeded him. Instead of relenting or relaxing the wars started by his ancestors, king Xerxes I redoubled the mobilization of the Persian empire for war against the Greeks. His goal was to conquer and dominate Greece and then on to Europe.

The zeal of a prince freshly crowned burned within His Majesty’s breast. Xerxes son of Darius would not be judged by history inferior to his father, nor to his illustrious forebears Cambyses and Cyrus the Great. These, who had vanquished and enslaved all Asia, would be joined in the pantheon of glory by Xerxes, their scion, who would now add Greece and Europe to the roll of provinces of the Empire.

This story was largely recounted through the mouthpiece of a captive Greek warrior in the courts of Xerxes I. Regarded as the king of kings in his days, Xerxes wanted to know what made the Greeks, unlike his other conquered, and plundered nations adamant and unassailably devoted to their own nation.

You will follow the antagonists through their battle fields, mix with them through the blood-letting gores of face-to-face imminent death. In Sparta, falling in battle for their nation was a much coveted honor. And, you will get to know the women who stoically glory in their valiant warrior husbands, sons, and boyfriends — dead or alive.

You will learn of women, who on hearing that their boys and husbands have died in battle, their first concern is if their nation won the war. Tell me, what other heroism could be greater than that?

Here are some of my personal lessons;

  1. Fear actually kills you many times over before real death Listen to the conversation between a Spartan General and his protégé. “Answer this, Alexandros. When our countrymen triumph in battle, what is it that defeats the foe?” The boy responded in the terse Spartan style, “Our steel and our skill.” “These, yes,” Dienekes corrected him gently, “but something more. It is that.” His gesture led up the slope to the image of Phobos. Fear. Their own fear defeats our enemies.
  2. Where mentorship thrives, the family, organization, or enterprise thrives. “Such is the peculiar genius of the Spartan system of pairing each boy in training with a mentor other than his own father. A mentor may say things that a father cannot; a boy can confess to his mentor that which would bring shame to reveal to his father.”
  3. Group survival trumps personal survival. How does this compare with modern life where organizations trumpet “team effort” but often reward and glorify narcistic show-stealing lone rangers? “Have your instructors taught you why the Spartans excuse without penalty the warrior who loses his helmet or breastplate in battle, but punish with loss of all citizenship rights the man who discards his shield?” “They had”, Alexandras replied. “Because a warrior carries helmet and breastplate for his own protection, but his shield for the safety of the whole line.”
  4. Leadership is by example In ancient Greece, their kings lead at the battlefront as co-equals with their soldiers as free-men.This is in sharp contrasts to Xerxes and Persian kings who treat their soldiers as their kings’s personal properties and slaves.Of the Spartans, the author wrote that, “They could see their king, at nearly sixty, enduring every bit of misery they did. And they knew that when battle came, he would take his place not safely in the rear, but in the front rank, at the hottest and most perilous spot on the field.”
  5. Uncommon bravery and heroism of their women Chapter 18 is one of the most beautiful I’ve ever read in any novel. There, a rebel warrior Dekton (Rooster) was charged with sedition and brought bound before the Spartan state secret service, the krypteia. The verdict was certain death for the rebel, his innocent wife and infant son. The krypteia was out of bounds for these glorious Spartan women. Defiantly stealing in uninvited, a wife of one of the leaders of the krypteia boldly accused her own innocent husband as being the true father of the infant son of the wife of the accused rebel. I won’t spoil your reading pleasure by telling you how that story ended. The long and shot of it was that the rebel soldier was spared and reconciled with his generals. His life and that of his innocent wife and son were preserved. The ordeal now ended, listen to the general and the wife who accused him of infidelity in other to save the life of another man and his family. You are listening on the couple’s conversation after departing from that formidable council. “Dienekes wrapped his cloak about his wife’s shoulders. I could see him regard her keenly while she struggled to reclaim her self-command. A portion of him still burned, furious at her for what she had forced him to do tonight. But another part stood in awe of her, at her compassion and audacity and even, if the word may be applied, her generalship. The lady’s equilibrium returned; she glanced up to discover her husband studying her. She smiled for him. “Whatever deeds of virtue you have performed or may yet perform, my husband, none will exceed that which you have done this night.”
  6. Give us heroes, give us even more heroines. Here, the unequalled bravery of the Spartan women shined out from the lips of their king, Leonidas I. He was addressing the wife of one of those about to die 300 brave heroes on the eve of their departure for war, and their ultimate end at the Gates of Thermopylae, “I will never tell the city why I appointed these three hundred. I will never tell the Three Hundred themselves. But I now tell you. I chose them not for their own valor, lady, but for that of their women.” Greece stands now upon her most perilous hour. If she saves herself, it will not be at the Gates (death alone awaits us and our allies there) but later, in battles yet to come, by land and sea. Then Greece, if the gods will it, will preserve herself. Do you understand this, lady? Well. Now listen. From my lips sprang these words, reproving the king: ‘And is this the reward of women’s virtue, Leonidas? To be afflicted twice over, and bear a double grief? “Do you love your country?” he demanded. “This man, with his life, has preserved it. Bear him with honor.”
  7. You love freedom and want to live in peace? Prepare for war. You don’t have to agree with me. But. go tell it to the pacifists of this world that there is no other way around it. And that, my fiends is the greatest lesson I took away from reading The Gates of Fire. This passage from the foreword to the book brilliantly sums up everything.

“Two memorials remain today at Thermopylae. Upon the modem one, called the Leonidas Monument in honor of the Spartan king who fell there, is engraved his response to Xerxes’ demand that the Spartans lay down their arms. Leonidas’ reply was two words, Molon labe. “Come and get them.”

I’ve never and may never holiday in Greece, but if I ever get there, I already knew one of the first places I will visit. Yes. I’ve already googled the site of that monument.

Throughout the book, you will learn lessons about — love, bravery, integrity, courage, loyalty among others. For me the greatest lesson is this, freedom only come to those who will sacrifice their lives to earn it.

My Personal Key Takeaways.

  1. Fear actually kills you many times over before real death.
  2. As mentorship thrives, so the family, and the enterprise thrives.
  3. Group survival trumps personal survival.
  4. The best form of leadership is by example.
  5. Unsung heroism of our women can save the world. So,
  6. We need more heroes and even more heroines.
  7. Friends, if you love freedom and want to live in peace, prepare for war.

Thank you for reading this review. You must forgive my errors as you go get yourself a copy of the novel. Plus, you can support my writings at no extra cost to you by clicking here to become a Medium member, get access to my articles and thousands more from other writers. When you join Medium through this link, I may receive some little dollars as stipends from Medium.

SOURCE Copyright by ©Steven Pressfield; Gates of Fire — The Epic Battle of Thermopylae, Doubleday, 1998

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