
The rise of the personal AI advisors
A 60-Second Fix That Went Viral
Five years of chronic jaw pain. Multiple doctors, MRIs, and specialists—and still no answers. That was the plight of one Reddit user suffering a persistent jaw clicking (likely from an old boxing injury). In desperation, he turned to an unlikely last resort: an AI chatbot. He typed his symptoms into ChatGPT and waited for the bot's opinion. The response was shockingly on-point. ChatGPT suggested the user's jaw disc was 'slightly displaced but movable,' and walked him through a simple mouth exercise to reset it. 'I followed the instructions for maybe a minute max and suddenly… no click,' the user reported. 'After five years of just living with it, this AI gave me a fix in a minute. Unreal.'
The anecdote might sound like sci-fi wishful thinking, but it quickly went viral across social media. LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman highlighted the story, marveling at how an AI delivered relief in seconds after human experts struggled for years. Replies poured in from others with similar jaw issues who finally found answers to their medical dilemmas. Hoffman triumphantly declared 'Superagency!' on Twitter—his term for AI's almost superhuman problem-solving capacity. In other words, this was more than a one-off win for a clever chatbot; it felt like a glimpse into the future of personal healthcare and beyond.
ChatGPT: From Search Engine to Life Coach
The jaw episode underscores a broader shift in how young people are seeking information and advice. It's not just about troubleshooting medical quirks. Increasingly, people are posing all sorts of personal questions to AI, the kinds of questions they might once have typed into an incognito search or perhaps never voiced at all.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has a front-row view of this phenomenon. He notes stark generational differences in ChatGPT usage: 'Older people… use [ChatGPT] as a Google replacement,' Altman recently observed, whereas many in their 20s and 30s 'use it like a life advisor.'
In other words, younger users aren't just asking AI for trivia or weather updates, they're confiding in it, seeking guidance on college decisions, career moves, and personal dilemmas. Altman says some college students have ChatGPT so deeply integrated into their daily lives that 'they don't make life decisions without asking ChatGPT what they should do. It has the full context on every person in their life and what they've talked about.' The chatbot has effectively become a confidant—a kind of always-available sounding board and advisor in one.
Generational shift
Statistics back up this generational sea change. In a recent Vox Media survey, 61% of Gen Z and 53% of Millennials said they prefer AI tools like ChatGPT over traditional search engines like Google. It's a remarkable turning of the tide: the first internet generation, raised on Googling anything and everything, is now swapping keyword searches for conversations with AI.
The reasons are understandable. Rather than wading through pages of blue links and ads, a chatbot gives a straightforward answer or solution, often in a single exchange. Instead of piecing together advice from scattered forum posts and WebMD entries, you get a tailored response in plain English (or whatever language you speak). Unlike a one-and-done search query, an AI conversation can go deeper, you can ask follow-ups, provide context, and get nuanced answers that evolve with the conversation.
'Doctors will hate ChatGPT… [it's] 1000% more useful than WebMD,' one user quipped in response to the jaw-fixing story. That tongue-in-cheek comment captures a real sentiment: for a growing cohort of users, AI isn't just an information tool, but a trusted guide. It feels less like using software and more like consulting an ever-patient mentor or coach. Crucially, AI advisers can be brutally efficient. They're available 24/7, never get tired of questions, and can recall everything you've ever told them—something even the friendliest physician or counselor can't match.
A team of AI advisers
Millions are now acclimated to a general-purpose bot like ChatGPT as their all-in-one guru, but an even more profound shift is on the horizon: curated AI agents tailored to specific domains and individual needs. AI agents serve as specialized successors to the chatbots we know today: smarter, more personal, and deeply knowledgeable about you and the topics you care about. Instead of one AI to rule them all, you might soon have a whole team of AI advisors at your side.
This could have profound implications across a variety of use cases, from personalized health and wellness coaches who remember your medical history, track your symptoms, and provide advice accordingly, career mentors who can advise users on interview preparation and networking, to financial advisors who provide dedicated investment strategies that consider risk appetite and savings goals. AI agents can also serve as relationship coaches, mental wellness guides, and a catalog of other functions that are currently reserved for sophisticated human professionals.
AI proxies
These examples are no longer science fiction, with startups and large corporations already working to make domain-specific AI companions a reality. Expert-driven AI personas enable subject-matter experts, whether it's a doctor, a professor, a financial guru, or a popular podcaster, to create an AI version of themselves that can interact with anyone. Experts upload their knowledge (via articles, videos, and recordings), and the platform trains a customized AI that educates itself based on a flywheel of knowledge from those sources.
The result is a chatbot that doesn't just sound like an expert, but a specific, real person with a verified background. In essence, it's a way to bottle up expertise and scale it infinitely: an expert can help thousands of people at once through their AI proxy, without diluting the personal touch.
Expertise on demand
AI Agents will reinvent how people learn, interact, and build community in an AI-enabled society, where knowledge isn't accessed by trawling search results, but by conversing with an intelligent agent that understands a user's context and can tap into the world's expertise on demand. These agents can act independently on a user's behalf to perform web searches, interface with calendars or other services, curate flight options for travel, and carry out tasks without needing constant supervision.
Crucially, these curated agents promise k trust anchored in expertise and personalization, something today's general chatbots lack. A user might hesitate to take medical action based on a random internet answer, but advice from an AI trained by a respected doctor or a therapist carries more weight. And because these agents retain long-term memory, they offer continuity. Your conversations pick up where they left off, and over time, the AI develops a richer understanding of a user's needs and preferences. It's the difference between asking a stranger for advice versus consulting a personal coach who's been with you for years.
A Vision of AI-First Knowledge
The implications of this shift are enormous. We're looking at nothing less than a transformation in how humans find information, solve problems, and make decisions. In the past three decades, the phrase 'Google it' emerged as a reflection of the revolutionary idea that any answer was just a web search away. We have already heard in the past few years, 'Ask your AI,' just as often.
That future may seem idealistic, but signs of it are already sprouting. The fact that a 22-year-old today might consult an AI life coach before calling their parents speaks volumes about the comfort level younger generations have with AI. They trust it not just to fetch facts, but to understand and advise. And as the technology improves, these AI agents will only become more capable companions. They'll feel more natural, more 'alive', not in a sentient sense, but in their ability to hold extended, context-rich dialogues and proactively assist us. Instead of a one-size-fits-all oracle, we'll have a collection of personal AIs fine-tuned to different aspects of our lives.
All of this raises the question: Do AI advisors spell the end of traditional search engines and conventional advice channels? It's a possibility that Google's leadership is surely pondering. The tech giant has noted the trend of users turning to TikTok or ChatGPT for queries and is racing to infuse its search with AI. Yet, even if search engines incorporate chat features, the paradigm is shifting from searching to consulting. The AI agent model flips the script—you don't find information, information finds you via an intelligent intermediary that knows what you need.
We are on the cusp of a new era of AI-first knowledge seeking, one that is more conversational, contextual, and personalized than ever before. The transition won't happen overnight, and it won't be without challenges (accuracy, bias, and privacy among them). But as the Reddit jaw-fix story illustrates, people are already discovering that sometimes the best expert is an AI that reads everything and listens without judgment. The generations coming of age now are comfortable asking machines for guidance in a way no generation before was.
In the coming years, curated AI agents—your always-on career guru, health coach, financial planner, and confidant—could become as commonplace as smartphones. Instead of typing queries into a search bar, we'll chat with friendly AIs who know us and have a wealth of specialized knowledge to share. The digital knowledge ecosystem is being reshaped around these intelligent agents, moving from the chaotic open web toward more context-aware and continuous interactions. AI agents are poised to fundamentally reshape learning, interaction, and community. And if that vision holds, the way we get advice, from solving minor health annoyances to navigating life's biggest decisions, will never be the same.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
13 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Morton legend Andy Ritchie reveals how he discovered he'd had two heart attacks
In the past few months in these columns, I have addressed a number of sports from football to snooker, darts, horse racing and now, of course, I am enjoying the tennis at Wimbledon. If you have been following closely, and I am grateful that you have, you may have noticed a pattern: all my sports activity has come from being parked on the sofa in front of the telly. Now, there was always a school of thought that, if I wasn't kicking a ball, I would be lying idly in front of the box. I can tell you – not true. Well, mostly not true! Andy Ritchie reveals the health concerns that have affected him over the last 18 months or so. (Image: George Munro) However, the reason I am not out much has been, regrettably, a wee downturn in my physical health. I have felt for the best part of the last 18 months that I was not in full vigour, and I was putting that down to a lot of factors. I now know, that really since the turn of the year, my health has deteriorated and, after a spell of not feeling myself, I eventually went to a doctor who referred me to a consultant. I have had an ECG, I'm waiting on an angiogram, and my medication has increased - because, according to said consultant, I have had a couple of what I believe are called 'cardiac episodes'. In plain talk, that means heart attacks. Two of them. Naturally, I couldn't be happy with just one. I needed the full bhuna with nan bread. READ MORE: Looking after players well can play a big part in success, says Andy Ritchie Social media abuse has no place in sport or in life, says Morton legend Andy Ritchie explains why horse racing helped his mental health, if not his wallet 'I hope Dougie Imrie can get a UNITED support from Morton', says Andy Ritchie I have also become aware in my local manor that there has been a bit of talk about this and, before the dam bursts, so to speak, I wanted to let everyone know in my own way. This sort of news can travel faster than a Carlos Alcaraz forehand, so I wanted to be in charge of the story. So, where am I now? Well, as I said, the angiogram awaits, and from there, a precise course of treatment will be acted upon. That could range from even more meds up to a possible bypass. We shall see. Of course, the worst thing about this, and don't judge me, is that the fags are on their way out. I have smoked for over 50 years, even as a professional player. Then again, so did Johan Cruyff and John Robertson, so I am in good company. Andy Ritchie says that after more than 50 years he's given the fags the boot. (Image: Archant) I have curtailed my habit and, going forward, I will conquer it - not least of all because of Robin, my local pharmacist, who is helping me with this one. Night times are difficult because the new meds disrupt my sleeping pattern, but on the whole, I am generally fine and looking forward to the new season. I just felt that I wanted to share this with the good folk of Inverclyde who have shown me many kindnesses in the past. Hopefully, I will see some of you in due course perhaps at Cappielow but do not offer me a ciggy! Onwards and upwards, folks!
Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
va-Q-tec (HMSE:VQT) Is Investing Its Capital With Increasing Efficiency
If we want to find a stock that could multiply over the long term, what are the underlying trends we should look for? Amongst other things, we'll want to see two things; firstly, a growing return on capital employed (ROCE) and secondly, an expansion in the company's amount of capital employed. This shows us that it's a compounding machine, able to continually reinvest its earnings back into the business and generate higher returns. So when we looked at the ROCE trend of va-Q-tec (HMSE:VQT) we really liked what we saw. Trump has pledged to "unleash" American oil and gas and these 15 US stocks have developments that are poised to benefit. Just to clarify if you're unsure, ROCE is a metric for evaluating how much pre-tax income (in percentage terms) a company earns on the capital invested in its business. To calculate this metric for va-Q-tec, this is the formula: Return on Capital Employed = Earnings Before Interest and Tax (EBIT) ÷ (Total Assets - Current Liabilities) 0.22 = €23m ÷ (€140m - €37m) (Based on the trailing twelve months to December 2024). Therefore, va-Q-tec has an ROCE of 22%. In absolute terms that's a great return and it's even better than the Machinery industry average of 8.7%. View our latest analysis for va-Q-tec Historical performance is a great place to start when researching a stock so above you can see the gauge for va-Q-tec's ROCE against it's prior returns. If you're interested in investigating va-Q-tec's past further, check out this free graph covering va-Q-tec's past earnings, revenue and cash flow. We're delighted to see that va-Q-tec is reaping rewards from its investments and is now generating some pre-tax profits. The company was generating losses five years ago, but now it's earning 22% which is a sight for sore eyes. In addition to that, va-Q-tec is employing 33% more capital than previously which is expected of a company that's trying to break into profitability. We like this trend, because it tells us the company has profitable reinvestment opportunities available to it, and if it continues going forward that can lead to a multi-bagger performance. Long story short, we're delighted to see that va-Q-tec's reinvestment activities have paid off and the company is now profitable. Since the stock has returned a solid 10% to shareholders over the last year, it's fair to say investors are beginning to recognize these changes. With that being said, we still think the promising fundamentals mean the company deserves some further due diligence. Before jumping to any conclusions though, we need to know what value we're getting for the current share price. That's where you can check out our that compares the share price and estimated value. High returns are a key ingredient to strong performance, so check out our free list ofstocks earning high returns on equity with solid balance sheets. — Investing narratives with Fair Values Suncorp's Next Chapter: Insurance-Only and Ready to Grow By Robbo – Community Contributor Fair Value Estimated: A$22.83 · 0.1% Overvalued Thyssenkrupp Nucera Will Achieve Double-Digit Profits by 2030 Boosted by Hydrogen Growth By Chris1 – Community Contributor Fair Value Estimated: €14.40 · 0.3% Overvalued Tesla's Nvidia Moment – The AI & Robotics Inflection Point By BlackGoat – Community Contributor Fair Value Estimated: $359.72 · 0.1% Overvalued View more featured narratives — Have feedback on this article? Concerned about the content? Get in touch with us directly. Alternatively, email editorial-team (at) article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.
Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Megabill hits health care for immigrants, including legal ones, hard
As President Donald Trump intensifies his targeting of undocumented immigrants, the GOP megabill passed Thursday takes aim at those here legally by revoking their access to subsidized care. Under current rules, those immigrants — green card holders, refugees, survivors of domestic violence, and individuals on work and student visas — can purchase health insurance on the Obamacare marketplace and receive tax credits to offset the cost. Some of them are also eligible for coverage through Medicaid, the state-federal program for low-income people, if they earn incomes below the poverty level, as well as Medicare, the federal program for elderly people. But the provisions in the GOP megabill narrow immigrant eligibility for these programs, allowing only green card holders, immigrants from Cuba and Haiti, and immigrants from certain Pacific Island countries access to federally funded health care. The move to restrict coverage for legal immigrants comes as the Trump administration pushes ahead on its aggressive immigration campaign, delivering mass deportations, challenging birthright citizenship, and ending temporary protected status for hundreds of thousands of immigrants. 'These are the largest cuts to health coverage that we have seen, and this will be one of the largest cuts to immigrants in recent years,' said Drishti Pillai, director of immigrant health policy at KFF, a health policy think tank in Washington. The Congressional Budget Office, a nonpartisan scorekeeper, estimated similar provisions would leave 1.3 million lawfully present immigrants uninsured in 2034. Low-income green card holders in the five-year waiting period that applies to them for Medicaid, but who are currently eligible for subsidized Obamacare coverage, are expected to be the largest group hit. The provisions have been overshadowed by broader Medicaid cuts, and the politically fraught nature of immigration has made Republicans reluctant to speak out about the restrictions. Still, they have raised concerns in both red and blue states because it would mean their already financially strained health care systems would have to bear the higher costs of uncompensated and emergency care. 'There is a lot of concern about how some of the immigration policies and some of the enrollment policies might play out throughout our patient population and our communities,' said Jonathan Chapman, chief executive of the Florida Association of Community Health Centers, who flew to Washington last week to lobby Congress and the White House on the megabill. Over 70 percent of patients at the state's federally qualified health centers are uninsured or on Medicaid, and they have already reduced services due to insufficient funding. Chapman added that Florida GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis' support for Trump's crackdown has already discouraged patients from seeking care at the community health centers, even though they typically do not ask about immigration status. 'If my status was not clearly defined, I would be concerned about signing anything,' he added. Vern Buchanan (R-Fla.), vice chair of the Ways and Means Committee, told POLITICO the megabill 'ensures that federal health care dollars are prioritized for American citizens.' Buchanan led a letter with 11 members of the Florida Republican House delegation supporting the megabill. Under fiscal pressure, blue states, including Minnesota and Illinois, have moved to roll back health care access for undocumented immigrants, who are not eligible for any federally subsidized health care programs. Last week, California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, approved a state budget that will scale back free health care for undocumented immigrants. One of the hardest-hit states from the megabill restrictions on immigrants will be New York, which is one of three states that have enacted a basic health program allowed under the Affordable Care Act known as the Essential Plan. The Essential Plan offers low-cost health insurance for New Yorkers earning up to 250 percent above the federal poverty line and is funded by federal dollars that would otherwise be used for ACA tax credits. The GOP megabill will strip coverage for half a million immigrants covered by the plan and shift the cost to New York. The state must pick up the tab because of a 2001 state court decision that requires it to cover immigrants who are ineligible for Medicaid due to their immigration status. The state's hospital lobby, the Greater New York Hospital Association, believes the provisions as a whole will cost New York $3 billion annually and leave 225,000 immigrant New Yorkers uninsured. 'The downstream impacts are not just on immigrants,' said Elisabeth Wynn, executive vice president at the New York hospital group. 'We don't close services for a particular insurance category, those get closed for all.' Earlier this month, five Republican House members from New York wrote a letter to Senate Finance Chair Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) urging a two- to three-year delay to the immigrant restrictions, warning an 'abrupt elimination…will have drastically disruptive consequences for New York's healthcare system.' The bill will exclude lawfully present immigrants earning below the federal poverty level from the Obamacare marketplace starting next year. Marketplace restrictions for lawfully present immigrants earning above the poverty level will start in 2027.