Gemini 3 Flash OCRs Dilbert accurately

Scott Adams, the author of Dilbert, passed away last month. While his work will live on, I was curious about the best way to build a Dilbert search engine. The first step is to extract the text. Pavan tested over half a dozen LLMs on ~30 Dilbert strips to see which one did the best. Here are the results. Summary: Gemini 3 Flash does the best, and would cost ~$20 to process the entire Dilbert archive. But if you want a local solution, Qwen 3 VL 32b is the best. ...

When to use which Gemini mode

I continue to be impressed by Gemini 3 and it’s become my default agent. It writes in simpler language than ChatGPT (almost as eloquent as Claude), has much larger limits, and, of course, is unbeaten at generating images. The Gemini app has 3 modes: Fast, Thinking, and Pro. Here’s when to use each: Simple task, e.g., grammar check, translate, summarize, or basic question? Use Fast. Pro overthinks. Multi-step logic, e.g., planning a trip with constraints, checking 15 emails, or identifying a subtle error in code? Use Thinking. Flash-based thinking beats Pro. Large input, e.g. 300-page PDF, 2 hours of video, etc.? Use Pro. It uses the 1M+ token window well. Complex problem, e.g. PhD-level science or a legal contract review, with high stakes? Use Pro. If you hit your Pro limit (which is pretty high!), just switch to Thinking, which is smart enough for most jobs anyway. ...

Breaking Rules in the Age of AI

Several educators have AI-enabled their courses, like: David Malan at Harvard CS50 provides an AI-powered “rubber duck debugger” trained on course-specific materials. Mohan Paturi at UC San Diego has deployed AI-tutors to his students. Ethan Mollick at Wharton uses AI as tutor, coach, teammate, simulator, even student, and runs simulations. Jeremy Howard’s Fast.ai encourages students to use LLMs to write code, with a strict verification loop. Andrew Ng DeepLearning.AI integrates a chatbot into the platform, next to code cells, to handle syntax errors and beginner questions. But no one seems to have eliminated reading material, nor added an “Ask AI” button to solve each question, nor run it at my scale (~3,000 students annually). ...