I began demystifying AI after attending a talk where the speaker, under the influence of a supposed ‘techbro’ podcaster and despite having no knowledge of computing, segued into a convincing speech about how ChatGPT would breed robots and take over the world.
This inspired me to offer light-hearted talks presenting a fact-based view of what AI etc., can and cannot actually do. Dates and times of upcoming talks can be found on my talks page.
Below are some descriptions of talks I have given and a contact form at the bottom of the page.
Last updated: 4th March 2025

Ghosts of AI

In the news, we are constantly reading about how AI is going to self-evolve and take over the world, to which I say robots are welcome round my house anytime to take charge of the shopping, housework, and please can they can cook the dinner too? In this talk, we trace the recurring rise and fall of AI with its spooky stories of the ghost in the machine. From robots in Ancient Greece to present day ChatGPT, we look at how and why AI was created and exactly what it can and cannot do.
Read more: The ghosts of AI and Chit chat chitty-chitty chit chat chatgpt.
You have filled in so much
Mary Evans
that I couldn’t understand.
When computers were women
The first computers were women, low-paid and unrecognised. But thanks to them, the first computer was coded up, a man walked on the moon, and computers learnt to understand English. So why were their contributions written out of history? In this talk, we trace the story of computers from 1731, when the Edinburgh Weekly Journal advised young married women to know their husband’s income and be a good computer and keep within it, until present day to see how this man’s world would have never progressed without the women which gave it its name.
Read more: Fighting, typing and computing and When women were computers.


Digital anthropology

In the 1970s, anthropologists at the University of California, Berkeley, began studying up, applying anthropology – the scientific study of behaviour, culture and society – to how Westerners behave. With the rise of the WWW in the 1990s this has extended to our digital life and beyond. From the first office anthropologists, via social animals on social media and undercover anthropologists in the World of Warcraft, to artificial intimacy with chatbots and post-human aspirations, we consider what it means to be human in a digital world.
Read more: Eat, pray, artificial love and Ruth Stalker-Fascinating.
My mind is spinning!
Helen Kestle
So much incredible
information!
Bacon on ice-cream
When McDonald’s withdrew its AI from the drive-thru after it kept putting bacon on ice-cream, most people were left baffled. In this talk, we take a look at speech recognition and natural language processing using machine learning to see why the rogue AI would ‘think’ that bacon is a good topping for ice-cream. And, why it couldn’t possibly improve without human intervention (artificial AI). It is invariably quicker and cheaper to get a human to behave like a robot, rather than the other way round.
Read more: Bacon on Ice-cream and Duolingo Dutch.


Contact Ruth
If you’d like me to give a talk, I’d be delighted to hear from you.