I don’t think Google is the same as IBM here. I think Google’s problem is its insanely low attention span. It frequently releases innovative and well built products, but seems to quickly lose interest. Google has become somewhat notorious for killing off popular products.
On the other hand, I think IBM’s problem is its finance focus and longterm decay of technical talent. It is well known for maintaining products for decades, but when’s the last time IBM came out with something really innovative? It touted Watson, but that was always more of a gimmick than an actually viable product.
Google has the resources and technical talent to compete with OpenAI. In fact, a lot of GPT is based on Google’s research. I think the main things that have held Google back are questions about how to monetize effectively, but it has little choice but to move forward now that OpenAI has thrown down the gauntlet.
In addition, products that seem like magic at launch get worse over time instead of better.
I used to do all kinds of really cool routines and home control tasks with Google home, and it could hear and interpret my voice at a mumble. I used it as an alarm clock, to do list, calendar, grocery list, lighting control, give me weather updates, set times etc. It just worked.
Now I have to yell unnaturally loud for it to even wake, and even then the simplest commands have a 20% chance of throwing “Sorry I don’t understand” or playing random music. Despite having a device in every room it has lost the ability to detect proximity and will set timers or control devices across the house. I don’t trust it enough anymore for timers and alarms, since it will often confirm what I asked then simply… not do it.
Ask it to set a 10 minute timer.
It says ok setting a timer for 10 minutes.
3 mins later ask it how long is remaining on the timer. A couple years ago it would say “7 minutes”.
Now there’s a good chance it says I have no timers running.
It’s pathetic, and I would love any insight on the decay. (And yes they’re clean, the mics are as unobstructed as they were out of the box)
Yes, we burned the biscuits when my sister-in-law was visiting over Thanksgiving because she used the Google assistant to set an alarm and the alarm did not go off. Timers no longer work and there's no indication that this is the case.
Google Home perplexes me. I have several of them around the house and they were perfectly fine for years, but someone in the last couple of years they are markedly worse. I would be happy if they just rolled back to 4 years ago and never touch it again. Now, I just wonder how much worse it will get before I give up on the whole ecosystem.
Same experience with Google Assistant on Android. I used to be able to use it to create calendar events in one shot. A few years ago it started insisting on creating events in steps, which always failed miserably.
> its insanely low attention span. It frequently releases innovative and well built products, but seems to quickly lose interest quickly. Google has become somewhat notorious for killing off popular products.
I understood this problem to be "how it manages its org chart and maps that onto the customer experience."
To add some color to this, the culture for a very long time would reward folks that came up with novel solutions to problems or novel products. These folks would dedicate some effort into the implementation, land the thing, then secure a promo with no regard for the sustainability of the aforementioned solution. Once landed, attention goes elsewhere and the thing is left to languish.
This behavior has been observed publicly in the Kubernetes space where Google has contributed substantially.
Along with your thoughts, I feel that Google's problem has always been over-promising. (There's even comedy skits about it.)
That starts with the demonstrations which show really promising technology, but what eventually ships doesn't live up to the hype (or often doesn't ship at all.)
It continues through to not managing the products well, such as when users have problems with them and not supporting ongoing development so they suffer decay.
It finishes with Google killing established products that aren't useful to the core mission/data collection purposes. For products which are money makers they take on a new type of financially-optimised decay as seen with Search and more recently with Chrome and YouTube.
I'm all for sunsetting redundant tech, but Google has a self-harm problem.
The cynic in me feels that part of Google's desire to over-promise is to take the excitement away from companies which ship* what they show. This seems to align with Pichai's commentary, it's about appearing the most eminent, but not necessarily supporting that view with shipping products.
* The Verge is already running an article about what was faked in the Gemini demo, and if history repeats itself this won't be the only thing they mispresented.
Google has one major disadvantage - it's an old megacorporation, not a startup. OpenAI will be able to innovate faster. The best people want to work at OpenAI, not Google.
Also there’s less downside risk for OpenAI. Google has layers of approvals and risk committees because they don’t want to put the money machine at risk through litigation, reputation or regulation. OpenAI has nothing to lose—this is their only game. That allows them to toe the line of what’s acceptable like Uber in its early years. With all the copyright risk involved, that’s a big deal.
I think the analogy is kind of strained here - at the current stage, OpenAI doesn't have an overwhelming superiority in quality in the same way Google once did. And, if marketing claims are to be believed, Google's Gemini appears to be no publicity stunt. (not to mention that IBM's "downfall" isn't very related to Deep Blue in the first place)
> OpenAI doesn't have an overwhelming superiority in quality in the same way Google once did
The comparison is between a useful shipping product available to everyone for a full year vs a tech demo of an extremely limited release to privileged customers.
There are millions of people for whom OpenAI's products are broadly useful, and the specifics of where they fall short compared to Gemini are irrelevant here, because Google isn't offering anything comparable that can be tested.
I'd say IBM's downfall was directly related to failing to monetize Deep Blue (and similar research) at scale.
At the time, I believe IBM was still "we'll throw people and billable hours at a problem."
They had their lunch eaten because their competitors realized they could undercut IBM on price if they changed the equation to "throw compute at a problem."
In other words, sell prebuilt products instead of lead-ins to consulting. And harness advertising to offer free products to drive scale to generate profit. (e.g. Google/search)
I don't really see how IBM would ever be able to monetize something like Deep Blue. It was a research project that was understood to not be a money-maker (outside of PR, probably), and it resulted in highly specialized hardware running highly specialized software, working for its one purpose. I agree that their business model and catering to big business first is what likely led to them scaling down today, but it's still disconnected from Deep Blue.
It's an interesting analogy. I think Googles problem is how disruptive this is to their core products monetization strategy. They have misaligned incentives in how quickly they want to push this tech out vs wait for it to be affordable with ads.
Whereas for OpenAI there are no such constraints.
Did IBM have research with impressive web reverse indexing tech that they didn't want to push to market because it would hurt their other business lines? It's not impossible... It could be as innocuous as discouraging some research engineer from such a project to focus on something more in line.
This is why I believe businesses should be absolutely willing to disrupt themselves if they want to avoid going the way of Nokia. I believe Apple should make a standalone apple watch that cannibalizes their iPhone business instead of tying it to and trying to prop up their iPhone business (ofc shareholders won't like it). Whilst this looks good from Google - I think they are still sandbagging.. why can't I use Bard inside of their other products instead of the silly export thing.
No, because OpenAI and Microsoft both have “CUSTOMER NONCOMPETE CLAUSES” in their terms of use. I didn’t check Apple, but Google doesn’t have any shady monopolistic stuff like that.
“What You Cannot Do. You may not use our Services for any illegal, harmful, or abusive activity. For example, you may not: […] Use Output to develop models that compete with OpenAI.” (Hilarious how that reads btw)
“AI Services.
”AI services” are services that are labeled or described by Microsoft as including, using, powered by, or being an Artificial Intelligence (“AI”) system. Limits on use of data from the AI Services. You may not use the AI services, or data from the AI services, to create, train, or improve (directly or indirectly) any other AI service.”
That 100% does include GitHub Copilot, by the way. I canceled my sub. After I emailed Satya, they told me to post my “feedback” in a forum for issues about Xbox and Word (what a joke). I emailed the FTC Antitrust team. I filed a formal complaint with the office of the attorney general of the state of Washington.
I am just one person. You should also raise a ruckus about this and contact the authorities, because it’s morally bankrupt and almost surely unlawful by virtue of extreme unfairness and unreasonableness, in addition to precedent.
AWS, Anthropic, and NVIDIA also all have similar Customer Noncompete Clauses.
I meekly suggest everyone immediately and completely boycott OpenAI, Microsoft, AWS, Anthropic, and NVIDIA, until they remove these customer noncompete clauses (which seem contrary to the Sherman Antitrust Act).
Just imagine a world where AI can freely learn from us, but we are forbidden to learn from AI. Sounds like a boring dystopia, and we ought to make sure to avoid it.
They cannot enforce a non-compete on a customer. Check out the rest of their terms that talk about durability. They will sneakily say "our terms that are illegal don't apply but the rest do."
You cannot tell a customer that buying your product precludes them from building products like it. That violates principles of the free market, and it's unenforceable. This is just like non-competes in employment. They aren't constitutional.
> But no, they cannot levy fines or put you in jail.
Those are the consequences that matter. I don't care if Microsoft or Google decide they don't want to be friends with me. They'd stab me in the back to steal my personal data anyway.
Sounds like we need legislature to void these "customer non-compete clauses". Not holding my breath though, see what govts allows copyrights to become. Govts seems to protect (interests of near-) monopolies more than anything.
This is a perfect example of the owner class getting away with crime (copyright infringement) and using it against the public (you can't use AI output!).
Businesses are not entitled to life or existence the way individuals are.
It's not unlawful, it's not morally bankrupt. Noncompete clauses have been around since the beginning of human commercial activity and have a valid reason to exist - to encourage companies/people/investors to put large sums of capital at risk to develop novel technologies. If there was no way to profit from them, the capital would be non-existent.
It's not theater, it's very real. Companies are making decisions to not use data generated from openai. They are making the decision because they know if they go the other way they know they risk it being leaked via someone internal that they are doing it, that it's pretty easy to figure out during a discovery process. I'm involved in this issue right now, and no one is treating it as something to just blow off. I know several other companies in the same boat.
They have many orders of magnitude more money and attorneys that would work full-time on such a case to ensure that even if they lost the court battle, the person or company doing the thing that they didn't like would be effectively bankrupted, so they still win in the end.
You'll find that if you learn a good amount about the law, it's empowering. The courts are an adversarial place. For every person getting sued... someone is suing. It's isn't "big brother" or "my keeper" or "the man keeping you down" or however you imagine it. You can be the one exerting the pressure if you know what you are doing.
When did you last try? I’m too embarrassed to say how often and onto what kind of surfaces my iPhone 12 has been dropped, but I’m amazed it’s still seemingly completely functional.
My iPhone 4, on the other hand, shattered after one incident…
I was more referring to Nokia's complacency which led to its demise. Nokia was infamous for incremental updates to their phone line, making users upgrade regularly. You could never find a "complete" Nokia phone; each phone was deliberately crippled some how. Apple does the same with their iDevices.
Xbox and Surface have been around a long time as product categories. Xbox isn't even the premier device in its segment.
Highly doubt MS will ever be successful on mobile... their last OS was pretty great and they were willing to pay devs to develop, they just couldn't get it going. This is from someone who spent a ton of time developing on PocketPC and Windows Mobile back in the day.
Products are not the reason for their resurgence.
Apple makes a ton in services, but their R&D is heavily focused on product and platform synergy to that ecosystem extremely valuable.
Afaict, Windows Phone mostly failed because of timing. In the same way that XBox mostly succeeded because of timing. (In the sense that timing dominated the huge amount of excellent work that went into both)
Microsoft is a decent physical product company... they've usually just missed on the strategic timing part.
Timing was definitely an issue - first Windows Phone came 3 years after iOS and 2 after Android. AFA the product itself, I think the perception it needed to overcome was more PocketPC/Windows Mobile having an incredibly substandard image in the market after the iOS release which seemed light years ahead, esp. since MS had that market to themselves for so many years.
That said, it got great reviews and they threw $$ at devs to develop for it, just couldn't gain traction. IME it was timing more than anything and by the time it came to market felt more reactionary than truly innovative.
By this I mean that Microsoft had the positioning of an iPhone in a not-so-great version.
Where as Android relied on the "Open source" and free side for manufacturers to adapt to their phones, even if Google's services remained proprietary.
Can we really talk about timing, when it's above all a problem of a product that didn't fit the market?
Apple is the new Sony might be better. I'm trying to figure out who is the upcoming premium tech product company... not thinking of any. I think Tesla wants to be
I have considered Oracle and MS to be competing for the title of new IBM.
Maybe MS is shaking it off with their AI innovation, but I think a lot of that is just lipstick.
Deep Blue was the name of the computer itself rather than the software, but to answer your question - it didn't use machine learning, its program was written and tweaked by hand. It contained millions of different games and positions, and functioned by evaluating all possible moves at a certain depth. As far as I know, practical machine learning implementations wouldn't be a thing for a decent while after Deep Blue.
On one corner: IBM Deep Blue winning vs Kasparov. A world class giant with huge research experience.
On the other corner, Google, a feisty newcomer, 2 years in their life, leveraging the tech to actually make something practical.
Is Google the new IBM?