> If they had found it to be useful for reliably solving one or more real, clearly-identified problems, they would start by talking about that, because that sends a stronger signal
Respectfully, I don’t think we’re there yet. You and I are tired of the overabused AI label, but for the wide public, as of today, it’s still a stronger selling point. A solution to a specific problem could only be sold to people struggling with this particular problem, a product with a flashy page and AI capabilities could be sold to a wide tail of not overly tech-savvy enthusiasts. Makes a good bang for a buck, even if in short term.
> but for the wide public, as of today, it’s still a stronger selling point.
Is it really? People care that their phone takes great pictures each and every time, I doubt think you need to add that the way you do this is by applying various machine learning algorithms.
Where A.I falls down for me is in the failure cases, simply telling me that more training is required or that the training set was incomplete isn't good enough. You need to be able to tell me exactly why the computer made the mistake, and the current A.I products can't do that. That should be a strong indicator to shy away from A.I powered products in many industries.
Respectfully, I don’t think we’re there yet. You and I are tired of the overabused AI label, but for the wide public, as of today, it’s still a stronger selling point. A solution to a specific problem could only be sold to people struggling with this particular problem, a product with a flashy page and AI capabilities could be sold to a wide tail of not overly tech-savvy enthusiasts. Makes a good bang for a buck, even if in short term.