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Openai/6939b23e-87cc-8001-bdd9-9546d1143ce9
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=== User: i have a problem. === i have a problem. i want to create a 35 x ~800 table with ai model. i can't do it directly my model just ... refuses. i get it it's hard and complex but i need the table. how should i do this ? can i use a py program to take every cell one by one; column by column; row by row; the rows are already sorted in categories, subcategories, sub-subcategories (13 categories, ~10 subcategoreis per category, ~10 sub-subcategories per subcategory). one problem is that i have other tables that should be "consulted" to help create the main table; another problem is that cells have dependencies from one-another. my table head columns: " tech_name The standardized or generic designation of the technology or innovation, abstracted from cultural or temporal specifics. Serves as the canonical identifier of a distinct functional capability or principle. description A comprehensive explanation of the technology’s inherent mechanism, function, and intended operational outcome — independent of historical, social, or species context. Focuses purely on what it does and enables in systemic terms. Era / Period / epoch The broad developmental or evolutionary phase during which the technology first emerges, corresponding to a recognizable stage in technological or cognitive complexity. This situates it within a macro-historical continuum. tech_output The enduring capability, transformation, or systemic effect made possible through this technology — what it adds to the total repertoire of actions or processes within its context. category The highest-level taxonomic grouping reflecting the primary functional domain or systemic role of the technology (e.g., energy, communication, computation, material transformation, etc.). sub_category A narrower classification within the main category, defining a specific functional or methodological subset of the technology’s domain. Used for hierarchical organization or ontological refinement. natural_resource_prerequisites The essential abiotic resources or materials drawn from the physical environment that are required for the technology’s emergence, production, or operation.Add clear distinct examples.Add clear distinct examples. natural_resource_prerequisites_explanations The causal rationale linking the technology’s function or process to the necessity of its natural resources — explaining why those specific materials or conditions are indispensable. biological_prerequisites The biotic or organic components — including living systems, biological materials, or physiological capabilities — required for the technology’s creation, operation, or conceptualization.Add clear distinct examples. biological_prerequisites_explanations The detailed reasoning connecting biological systems or capacities to the function of the technology, clarifying the dependency chain between life-based processes and technological function. geographical_prerequisites The environmental or spatial conditions under which the technology can arise or function — encompassing terrain, climate, hydrology, and other location-dependent factors.Add clear distinct examples. geographical_prerequisites_explanations The explanation of how and why specific geographical or environmental features enable or constrain the technology’s feasibility, emergence, or efficiency. previous_tech_prerequisites The direct antecedent technologies that must exist or be mastered prior to the development of this one, forming its technological lineage or dependency chain.Add clear distinct examples. related_or_parallel_technologies Other technologies that arise independently yet share functional, conceptual, or structural similarities — existing contemporaneously or in analogous systems.Add clear distinct examples. enabler_results The distinct set of future technologies or systemic capabilities made possible by the existence or mastery of this technology — the next nodes in its technological dependency network.Add clear distinct examples. enabler_description The causal and functional explanation of how this technology facilitates, accelerates, or directly unlocks subsequent innovations — detailing the mechanisms of technological progression. primary_energy_source The fundamental type and origin of energy required to operate or sustain this technology, abstracted to its physical or chemical basis. .Add clear distinct examples. tools_used The set of instrumental devices, apparatuses, or mechanisms necessary to create, maintain, or apply the technology — including both direct tools and supporting infrastructure. .Add clear distinct examples. weapons_enabled The range or type of weaponry or coercive technologies that could logically emerge or be enhanced as a result of this technological capability; optional if non-relevant. .Add clear distinct examples. transport_required Whether and how transportation systems are involved in the production, distribution, or operation of the technology, with attention to spatial logistics and mobility dependencies..Add clear distinct examples. education_level_and_type The degree and form of cognitive, technical, or institutional knowledge required to develop, transmit, or sustain the technology within a population.Add clear distinct examples..Add clear distinct examples. social_complexity Explain level of societal organization, hierarchy, or cooperative structure necessary to sustain the production, coordination, or transmission of this technology.Add clear distinct examples. population_density The approximate concentration of population required to support the emergence, specialization, and maintenance of this technology as a stable system..Add clear distinct examples (give word and number: Low - 10; ) population_density_explanations The underlying demographic or systemic reasons why a given population density is required — such as division of labor, resource throughput, or network effects. Add clear distinct examples. ecological_impact The totality of direct and indirect physical, chemical, and biological alterations imposed upon ecosystems as a result of this technology’s creation, use, or disposal — encompassing both disruptive and integrative effects. Add clear distinct examples. sustainability The degree to which the operation of this technology can persist over extended temporal scales without degrading the ecological, energetic, or social systems upon which it depends. Reflects long-term systemic balance or fragility. Add clear distinct examples. productivity_multiplier The relative quantitative increase in efficiency, output, or capacity introduced by the technology compared to prior baselines — a measure of functional amplification. innovation_rate The extent to which this technology accelerates the pace or probability of further technological developments, functioning as a meta-driver of innovation. innovation_rate_explanations The mechanisms through which this technology increases the rate of subsequent innovation — for example, through knowledge transfer, modularity, feedback loops, or infrastructure creation. Add clear distinct examples. tech_spread_rate The velocity and scope at which the technology diffuses across populations, regions, or systems, measured by adoption dynamics and propagation mechanisms.Add clear distinct examples tech_spread_rate_explanations The structural, social, or material reasons that govern the diffusion rate — such as portability, cost, communication efficiency, or cultural receptivity. stability_dependency The extent to which the functioning and continuity of this technology depend on social, political, or environmental stability — and the conditions that determine its resilience or fragility.Add clear distinct examples interconnectivity_index The degree of systemic linkage between this technology and others — representing how deeply it is embedded within larger technological networks or dependency webs.Add clear distinct examples diffusion_method The principal mechanisms through which the technology spreads — including imitation, trade, migration, education, codification, or digital transmission. notes Additional commentary or metadata. "
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