The task was to create a five-minute presentation about Stealthwriter in fifteen minutes. The first thing we wanted to figure out was its capabilities. We noticed that the AI was split into three different tables labeled Generate, Humanize, and AI Detector. This let us gain a general idea of what the AI was built for. To test the level of competence of the AI, we decided to have it generate a poem and then run that poem through the AI Detector and Humanize. The results were positive, but the AI Detector might not work accurately for the text it humanized. So, to test this, we used a Grammarly AI checker to double-check. We noticed that it had a level bar under the Humanize section. To figure out this bar, we decided to run the same text through at three different levels. This led us to understand that for Humanize, the higher the level, the more human it makes the AI text. We then tested this humanized text at varying levels through the AI checker of Stealthwriter and Grammarly. Surprisingly, the Grammarly AI checker actually detected less % AI writing than the Stealthwriter checker. Our plan for the presentation was to guide the audience through a demonstration of how the AI functions using the same prompt at varying levels under the Humanize tool. When we got to the presenting part, we were told that we would actually be talking about the process we used to create the presentation and not the presentation itself. This worked in our favor because our demonstration was along the lines of what we did to create it.