Chapters (Powered by ChapterMe) - 00:00 - Coming Up 00:14 - Intro 00:21 - Hype Cycles: Where is my AI revolution? 01:33 - Customer Service 03:58 - Developers 05:00 - Internet Research 05:52 - Gig Economy to Profound Impact 07:18 - Revisionist History 08:32 - Startup Innovation 09:35 - Outro
I actually do pick up my phone multiple times per day and use AI. Like whenever I have a question I don't google it anymore and instead ask Claude (makes me feel like a child again who just asks about everything). I also use LLMs daily for coding and writing tasks.
@@idiomaxiom Actually I was watching a TH-cam video where the guy specifically asked ChatGPT to help him make an operating system and ChatGPT said that he should go get an education etc. It didn't even try to help him.
@@chunkyMunky329 I asked the following to ChatGPT 4o. Is it possible to develop an os on my windows pc? how to go about it? Perhaps building a virtual machine is best? It proceeded to outline exactly how to do it. If it calls to me later, I might explore it.
Personally, AI has "blown my mind" several times in the last couple years.. I've had multiple, incredible conversations with the top LLMs, that while growing up most people told me AI wouldn't be capable of, for 100 years.
@@0xFreeWill That changes often.. For a while I was using the Copilot version of ChatGPT a lot, then Claude. I haven't paid for a subscription in 4 months tho, so I can't suggest which is the best service right now. I also use free and more open source stuff now, since those are getting better.
@@michaelnurse9089top engineers can still use it as a "pair of fresh eyes". Even though the engineer may be highly knowledgeable about the problem at hand it's easy to have an AI like Claude (especially with Aider or Claude Engineer) look at the problem and remind you of potential issues that you weren't thinking about, or give you suggestions of what to look at if you encountered a bug
@@twosaibackbot If you're a top engineer but have never used X framework, Y API, or Z product... The Ai has information you will want, and it's the fastest way to get it. Do you think anyone knows Amazon Web Services better than Ai at this point? It's just too big. No one person can know it all...
Backoffice activities, image recognition and predictive analysis are already making strong use of AI. Our startup is only possible today due to the combination of these three components and our users, who are over 65 years old, have no idea that the features they are using are AI based
I don’t understand why people talk about AI as essentially a superior replacement for automation, “push a button, stuff happens in real world”, without talking about the limitations of automation today; maintenance, failed edge cases, cost, etc. If people can talk about how it will actually improve the downsides or limitations of current automation, without just saying “it’s AI, it’s so going to be sooo good”, then I think you could help bridge the gap and help people actually see value. Rather than increasing AI fatigue.
I don't think you are ever going to be able to persuade any one that AI is going to be able to solve edge cases. I just know I will be that guy who has the problem only a human can deal with so I'd avoid any company if possible that relied on AI.
I was a plant manager for a biofuel company, I am an Automation guy, and Ai developer, and electrical mechanical tech, and IT. With Ai combined with automation its superior. here is why, PLC logic is event and condition based. its only as smart as the code it runs on. With Ai in the mix, that logic is no longer static logic because you have systems that are intelligent down to compent level that can adapt to new conditions outside the logic to make choices. It also will detect issues through machine learning and patterns in the whole of the optimation to self optimize, understand the wear and tear, request maintence based on detections that plc's will not see beyond thier static logic allowing for better understanding of what is going on. Not only that is the people that run the company can use this same Ai along with other ai's in the company to understand the data beyond a simple report from their staff who may not have the education to fully understand thier own jobs, allowing for better decisions across the whole company. It comes down to intelligent logic where ai's replace static functions and deciders with machine learning intelligence.
I suspect AI will make things worse for customers. We forget that many customer service reps are trained to retain customers without fixing the problem or offering a refund. Humans will fight for customers and keep the system balanced but imagine customer service constantly repeating “I’m sorry we can’t provide a refund” in 500 different ways…and sorry I am the only service rep, there is no human/ person.
@@Inceptionxg why would passing the touring test make it better if the intention is to retain customers without fixing the problem? That’s no an AI issue. It about how humans/ corporations use AI.
I don't follow the hypothesis at all - even amongst non-techies, I don't know anyone who hasn't been blown away by AI tools writing emails & endorsement letters, helping with meal planning and cooking, weight lifting, financial planning, etc... any time my wife has a question about taxes, we'll definitely consult a professional, but the immediate urge to know is often perfectly satisfied by a $20/mo LLM.
All of that could have been tackled with a few google searches though. If emails, meal planning, cooking, and weightlifting are difficult for someone in the 21st century then I got news for ya: the issue isn’t the lack of “AI”.
@@cautionroguerobots yeah, but with google you have to know the terminology to write effective queries. If you are totally unfamiliar with the topic, you'll write vague general queries, that won't get you far. GPT is good for initial research to get familiar with the topic.
@@michaldoubek4686 So when your wife "has a question about taxes" she blankly stares at a google search bar like a zombie looking at The Starry Night... but give her a $20/month LLM plan and billions of dollars worth of infrastructure and suddenly she remembers why she sat down at the computer in the first place?
@@cautionroguerobots if you want to strawman people, go somewhere else ;). All I said was, AI can help you refine your question, so you can search more effectively, which is true.
@@michaldoubek4686most people are missing that AI can provide contextual responses whereas Google results require extrapolating similar situations. AIs hallucinate though so always use caution friends.
That's pretty funny. Let them explain how customer service would justify all those investments in AI and how it could return them. AI is overhyped, and it's getting cheap very fast every single day. The investments are literally devalued exponentially since the exponential decrease in AI prices means that startups need the exponential increase in the number of customers just to stay at the same level. A looooot of companies will die.
In my opinion, the problem isn’t necessarily the quality of AI right now or that the right tools don’t exist. The problem is it’s free (other than my time of course) for me to do my day to day job or tasks. If I wanted to replace those with AI, I could for some of them, but it’s not one tool. It’s 12. And each one costs me $20 to $250 a month. I use AI a lot to do research or vet ideas, etc. I don’t use it for much else yet because I quite literally cannot afford it.
Customer support and dev productivity.... what about dishes and laundry? 😅 I know its hardware vs. software, but if the whole thesis is automating boring tasks so people are more free to be productive, lets focus on things no one wants to do: dishes, laundry, groceries, etc.
AI helped us tremendously, we are a team of 3 and with just me as a developer with the help of ai specially copilot was able to deliver rubapay, as for customer service it helped my 2 cofounders to handle hundreds of customer questions a day, its just amazing
What Dalton and Michael are missing is that United Airlines customer service is bad because it’s “intentional” not because they can’t make it good and would need AI 😅
Why don't people have iPhone fatigue though? Or computer fatigue? Or motor vehicle fatigue? Nobody is getting tired of using the technologies that actually do their job right.
If you consider what One person who's adapted to using AI can improve their efficiency in organization summarization valuation. Not to mention The advantages in data assessment. I don't think the hype is the problem. I think it's the engagement. Anybody who engages in using AI finds a way to make it prove an advantage. It's not a panacea, but it is a force multiplier for those who have the mind to take advantage of it
If AI hasn't blown your mind off in the last couple of years, maybe you haven't used it long enough, or you haven't figured out how to use it yet. There'll always be glass half empty people -- that's human nature. But for anyone else, this stuff is truly mind blowing already. Is it human? No -- don't have silly expectations. Is this generally intelligent, artificial intelligence? Yeah, very much so.
When it's fully conversational that will help greatly and when combined with agents or just a highly effective means of doing things for you it will be great. It is also foundational to robotics for everyone dreaming of a robot in their home that is useful. Right now there is more space for apps using it than just customer service, I dont think the app builders have begun to catch up yet but how does this not become a fantastic teacher of diverse subjects? The models we are seeing right now are amazing but when this goes 100x and it will much faster than moore's law, you will really see something.
8:16 “You are both on the record to speak candidly regarding shell shocked”. The “powers that be. : “Major AI companies have been implementing and imposing AI development and have found themselves in a critical bind.” These AI companies are seriously affected by geopolitical significant security risks globally now…. because it is most definitely “shell shocking”. (Reminded of the romans ugh) Those that would desire to be “ shell shocked” obviously use rhetoric to describe something they have never been.” “Perfect…. that’s what we want!”As they are laughing at the shells are already placed between your cradles and doorways. “They don’t even feel them there?!” Laughs persist. “I say to anyone who assumes shells are not under your cradles or sitting beneath the powerful thrones of ignorance…. you just have not seen all the data. “ Jeremy
where I work, there is department like customer support where they answer clients questions live via chat, but the problem is that the company even is not planning to implement AI. Maybe it's time to quit and apply to YC and push my personal ideas forward. 🤍
I agree with Ai fixing the simpler . Low hanging fruit pain points first before the more complex ones or aiding with customer personalization solutions
And while we are at it: touching a phone and having a real thing happen is not that crazy if you think that you could do all that without the phone as well.
People don't yet realize the incredible ability for AI to synthesize answers to questions. This is very heavily used by those of us with curious minds. I use it 3 times a day at least during off hours. As an educational and productivity tool. If you tend to use it a lot you will more likely have an accurate understanding of the world around you: history, geography, education, programming, economy, investment, how technology works, trends etc. AI is also incredible when it comes to entertainment, art and litterature, mimicking famous writers on a dime. If the internet was the great flattener, it seems like AI is the great differentiator: a necessary tool to use if you want to assimilate information quickly. AI startup companies, on the other hand, are becoming commodities, like Palo Alto restaurants (in my view). There is only room maybe for the top 5. I could be wrong. Time will tell...
Customer support? For real? It’s the worst user experience ever to talk to a bot. And it probably always will be. It’s like the worst area to hype for AI.
AI has already profoundly changed life for me and a few people in my proximity. It's just so convenient to ask chatGPT for anything with the speech-to-text function, or have LLMs brainstorm ideas with me. I do more and more things with AI, and really love it.
Take a picture of piece of paper full of data , upload into chat gpt , prompt : extrect data matching these fields , copy that data...done . that saved me 1 week of data entry work ... now u figure ...if this really gets smart its over for data entry people
The use case I’m waiting for is going to my bank app, through voice I would send money to person X, all done through AI without me manually selecting beneficiary, amount etc etc to send. This is gamechanging
No one wants an AI to handle customer service. Customer service is more about the customer being heard and valued, solving issues are secondary. Nothing feels more disconnected than an AI machine handling your inquiries.
Profoundly disagree. I’m tired of waiting on hold forever or having human customer support agents unable to handle basic requests, transfer me to their manager’s manager, waiting 3 hours to be able to re-book a cancelled flight, etc. I cannot wait until every customer support agent is an AI system and my calls get answered immediately.
@@wfwefwwgwrgwe Yeah thats a great point, especially if you consider that video games are already hundreds of gigabytes to install today and they are a much smaller world.
Progressive educators haven't been a fan of "homework" for decades now. Work that is done outside of class time? Yes, of course, but homework is most often just busywork that doesn't help a student retain what we want them to retain. Teachers that still assign homework because they think it is rigorous or something kinda deserve all the ChatGPT answers they get. That said... kids are quickly coming to the idea that they simply never need to actually *learn* anything because ChatGPT can just tell them literally anything they might need to know. This is having an impact on students' ability to think logically, thinking critically, and think step-by-step. Homework is BS, but students that think ChatGPT can replace the skill of critical thinking are... not thinking critically.
I will say this about United Airlines. I was traveling internationally, I missed my flight completely by my own fault, I was open and honest with them and the lady on the line went beyond to try to help me. Unfortunately, in that particular instance, my card also declined, but I ended up with an extremely positive perception of United's customer service.
But how profitable will it be? What if, before we see much of the benefits and profits, we see layoffs and pain first? Perhaps AI will first cannabalize programming and tech jobs first. That would be ironic. Actually, it is likely that the tech industry will be the first and most disrupted. Maybe we are seeing that already. Perhaps the layoffs that have occured in the last two years were just the first of many waves. Also, this video focuses on Uber and so called the so-called "sharing" economy. Do you or Uber share your money to help pay for the car repairs and health insurance and below minimum wage the drivers often get? I used to like Sam Altman a lot. But he clearly has changed his ethics and his philosophy from when OpenAI started. Y Combinator is different as well. I don't know yet what to make of it all, but it feels a bit like a dark harbinger. Like you, most of you techies, don't live in the same world as the rest of us. So are you building a world for yourself or for us or for everyone?
AI chat can be useful, but it also can be incredibly dumb and useless. In fact, AI can be a real danger because it can give totally incorrect or misleading answers. It can act in a parrot fashion as it affirms things you say but are in fact wrong.
Chapters (Powered by ChapterMe) -
00:00 - Coming Up
00:14 - Intro
00:21 - Hype Cycles: Where is my AI revolution?
01:33 - Customer Service
03:58 - Developers
05:00 - Internet Research
05:52 - Gig Economy to Profound Impact
07:18 - Revisionist History
08:32 - Startup Innovation
09:35 - Outro
The hype cycle dread comes from a valid place: people using AI because it's AI, not because it's the right tool to solve a problem.
Thats not accurate. They have told us for years that AI is the tool for everything
Really feeling the backlash against AI lately - when I talk to my customers they’re stoked about “anti-AI” features
What do you mean
@@charlielee3945 Still in stealth, but it’s partly for users to take control over their algorithmic feeds
@@charlielee3945 I’m also really bullish on new fediverse tech, like the ActivityPub protocol. Human centered social feels like “anti-AI” to me
@@jcpractices I see
customers feel potential job threats
I actually do pick up my phone multiple times per day and use AI. Like whenever I have a question I don't google it anymore and instead ask Claude (makes me feel like a child again who just asks about everything). I also use LLMs daily for coding and writing tasks.
There is also behavior change intertia. I almost never use Google search anymore in favour of LLMs.
AI feels like it has raised my IQ by 50 points.
Nothing is off-limits for learning now.
This is how I feel
Then why don't you try to use an AI to build an operating system from scratch? I guarantee you can't get past that limit
Imagine you could start life again with one of these to help you along with learning.
@@idiomaxiom Actually I was watching a TH-cam video where the guy specifically asked ChatGPT to help him make an operating system and ChatGPT said that he should go get an education etc. It didn't even try to help him.
@@chunkyMunky329
I asked the following to ChatGPT 4o.
Is it possible to develop an os on my windows pc? how to go about it? Perhaps building a virtual machine is best?
It proceeded to outline exactly how to do it. If it calls to me later, I might explore it.
Personally, AI has "blown my mind" several times in the last couple years.. I've had multiple, incredible conversations with the top LLMs, that while growing up most people told me AI wouldn't be capable of, for 100 years.
which one is your favorite
@@0xFreeWill That changes often.. For a while I was using the Copilot version of ChatGPT a lot, then Claude. I haven't paid for a subscription in 4 months tho, so I can't suggest which is the best service right now.
I also use free and more open source stuff now, since those are getting better.
I'm blown away by Ai. Software engineering will never be the same again.
Depends for which engineers. Top engineers it has very little utility. Those still learning - gives you super powers.
@@michaelnurse9089 it has enormous utility for all engineers. There is too much for any one person to know.
@@michaelnurse9089top engineers can still use it as a "pair of fresh eyes". Even though the engineer may be highly knowledgeable about the problem at hand it's easy to have an AI like Claude (especially with Aider or Claude Engineer) look at the problem and remind you of potential issues that you weren't thinking about, or give you suggestions of what to look at if you encountered a bug
@@twosaibackbot If you're a top engineer but have never used X framework, Y API, or Z product... The Ai has information you will want, and it's the fastest way to get it. Do you think anyone knows Amazon Web Services better than Ai at this point? It's just too big. No one person can know it all...
@@JasonLayton Yeah I agree
Backoffice activities, image recognition and predictive analysis are already making strong use of AI. Our startup is only possible today due to the combination of these three components and our users, who are over 65 years old, have no idea that the features they are using are AI based
I don’t understand why people talk about AI as essentially a superior replacement for automation, “push a button, stuff happens in real world”, without talking about the limitations of automation today; maintenance, failed edge cases, cost, etc.
If people can talk about how it will actually improve the downsides or limitations of current automation, without just saying “it’s AI, it’s so going to be sooo good”, then I think you could help bridge the gap and help people actually see value. Rather than increasing AI fatigue.
I don't think you are ever going to be able to persuade any one that AI is going to be able to solve edge cases. I just know I will be that guy who has the problem only a human can deal with so I'd avoid any company if possible that relied on AI.
I was a plant manager for a biofuel company, I am an Automation guy, and Ai developer, and electrical mechanical tech, and IT. With Ai combined with automation its superior. here is why, PLC logic is event and condition based. its only as smart as the code it runs on. With Ai in the mix, that logic is no longer static logic because you have systems that are intelligent down to compent level that can adapt to new conditions outside the logic to make choices. It also will detect issues through machine learning and patterns in the whole of the optimation to self optimize, understand the wear and tear, request maintence based on detections that plc's will not see beyond thier static logic allowing for better understanding of what is going on. Not only that is the people that run the company can use this same Ai along with other ai's in the company to understand the data beyond a simple report from their staff who may not have the education to fully understand thier own jobs, allowing for better decisions across the whole company. It comes down to intelligent logic where ai's replace static functions and deciders with machine learning intelligence.
1:33 is a great point and we're building in that space 🚀
I suspect AI will make things worse for customers. We forget that many customer service reps are trained to retain customers without fixing the problem or offering a refund. Humans will fight for customers and keep the system balanced but imagine customer service constantly repeating “I’m sorry we can’t provide a refund” in 500 different ways…and sorry I am the only service rep, there is no human/ person.
Rather talk to Siri than Rajesh to cancel a phone plan
Until it passes the Turing test
@@Inceptionxg why would passing the touring test make it better if the intention is to retain customers without fixing the problem? That’s no an AI issue. It about how humans/ corporations use AI.
@priyab7743 If AI is in that place rather than human, I doesn't matter which is AI or human if it passes the test.
I don't follow the hypothesis at all - even amongst non-techies, I don't know anyone who hasn't been blown away by AI tools writing emails & endorsement letters, helping with meal planning and cooking, weight lifting, financial planning, etc... any time my wife has a question about taxes, we'll definitely consult a professional, but the immediate urge to know is often perfectly satisfied by a $20/mo LLM.
All of that could have been tackled with a few google searches though.
If emails, meal planning, cooking, and weightlifting are difficult for someone in the 21st century then I got news for ya: the issue isn’t the lack of “AI”.
@@cautionroguerobots yeah, but with google you have to know the terminology to write effective queries. If you are totally unfamiliar with the topic, you'll write vague general queries, that won't get you far. GPT is good for initial research to get familiar with the topic.
@@michaldoubek4686 So when your wife "has a question about taxes" she blankly stares at a google search bar like a zombie looking at The Starry Night... but give her a $20/month LLM plan and billions of dollars worth of infrastructure and suddenly she remembers why she sat down at the computer in the first place?
@@cautionroguerobots if you want to strawman people, go somewhere else ;). All I said was, AI can help you refine your question, so you can search more effectively, which is true.
@@michaldoubek4686most people are missing that AI can provide contextual responses whereas Google results require extrapolating similar situations.
AIs hallucinate though so always use caution friends.
Fully agree. We forget the time of implementation is 10-15 years. We just started with AI. The effects will be profound, it’s just going to take time
That's pretty funny. Let them explain how customer service would justify all those investments in AI and how it could return them. AI is overhyped, and it's getting cheap very fast every single day. The investments are literally devalued exponentially since the exponential decrease in AI prices means that startups need the exponential increase in the number of customers just to stay at the same level. A looooot of companies will die.
In my opinion, the problem isn’t necessarily the quality of AI right now or that the right tools don’t exist. The problem is it’s free (other than my time of course) for me to do my day to day job or tasks. If I wanted to replace those with AI, I could for some of them, but it’s not one tool. It’s 12. And each one costs me $20 to $250 a month.
I use AI a lot to do research or vet ideas, etc. I don’t use it for much else yet because I quite literally cannot afford it.
Customer support and dev productivity.... what about dishes and laundry? 😅
I know its hardware vs. software, but if the whole thesis is automating boring tasks so people are more free to be productive, lets focus on things no one wants to do: dishes, laundry, groceries, etc.
Seriously, I would pay $$$ for a robot that folded my laundry
@@00purrington same lmao
The fact that YC needs to create a Video explaining why AI hasn´t its a sign...
AI helped us tremendously, we are a team of 3 and with just me as a developer with the help of ai specially copilot was able to deliver rubapay, as for customer service it helped my 2 cofounders to handle hundreds of customer questions a day, its just amazing
So what exactly are you doing ???
What Dalton and Michael are missing is that United Airlines customer service is bad because it’s “intentional” not because they can’t make it good and would need AI 😅
AI fatigue is a thing. I think we'll see more innovation after everyone has recovered from the hype.
Why don't people have iPhone fatigue though? Or computer fatigue? Or motor vehicle fatigue? Nobody is getting tired of using the technologies that actually do their job right.
why isn't the youtube algorithm finding me the perfect video? because i spend more time using youtube if im unsatisfied with my recommended
Thank you for keeping it "Real" Dalton and Michael 👍
If you consider what One person who's adapted to using AI can improve their efficiency in organization summarization valuation. Not to mention The advantages in data assessment. I don't think the hype is the problem. I think it's the engagement. Anybody who engages in using AI finds a way to make it prove an advantage. It's not a panacea, but it is a force multiplier for those who have the mind to take advantage of it
3:31 Peter Thiel says its bad thinking about the market this way...this suggest entering in a competitive area hence failing
feels like this episode had a unfortunate timing given the new hype
If AI hasn't blown your mind off in the last couple of years, maybe you haven't used it long enough, or you haven't figured out how to use it yet. There'll always be glass half empty people -- that's human nature. But for anyone else, this stuff is truly mind blowing already. Is it human? No -- don't have silly expectations. Is this generally intelligent, artificial intelligence? Yeah, very much so.
Why does this talk touch me so deeply?
Are you on a startup journey???
@@Inceptionxg kind of
@@heikelandres4941 what kind of startup??
When it's fully conversational that will help greatly and when combined with agents or just a highly effective means of doing things for you it will be great. It is also foundational to robotics for everyone dreaming of a robot in their home that is useful. Right now there is more space for apps using it than just customer service, I dont think the app builders have begun to catch up yet but how does this not become a fantastic teacher of diverse subjects? The models we are seeing right now are amazing but when this goes 100x and it will much faster than moore's law, you will really see something.
8:16
“You are both on the record to speak candidly regarding shell shocked”.
The “powers that be. :
“Major AI companies have been implementing and imposing AI development and have found themselves in a critical bind.”
These AI companies are seriously affected by geopolitical significant security risks globally now…. because it is most definitely “shell shocking”.
(Reminded of the romans ugh)
Those that would desire to be “ shell shocked” obviously use rhetoric to describe something they have never been.”
“Perfect…. that’s what we want!”As they are laughing at the shells are already placed between your cradles and doorways.
“They don’t even feel them there?!”
Laughs persist.
“I say to anyone who assumes shells are not under your cradles or sitting beneath the powerful thrones of ignorance…. you just have not seen all the data. “
Jeremy
where I work, there is department like customer support where they answer clients questions live via chat, but the problem is that the company even is not planning to implement AI. Maybe it's time to quit and apply to YC and push my personal ideas forward. 🤍
Yeah, I would like to hear???
I agree with Ai fixing the simpler . Low hanging fruit pain points first before the more complex ones or aiding with customer personalization solutions
And while we are at it: touching a phone and having a real thing happen is not that crazy if you think that you could do all that without the phone as well.
its too early, watch out in the coming years
Gig economy is the worst thing to happen . The worst case of oil money over funding a winner and consumers paying more in the end
TH-cam is an ai product, just not an llm one. The rec engine is how we found this.
People don't yet realize the incredible ability for AI to synthesize answers to questions. This is very heavily used by those of us with curious minds. I use it 3 times a day at least during off hours. As an educational and productivity tool. If you tend to use it a lot you will more likely have an accurate understanding of the world around you: history, geography, education, programming, economy, investment, how technology works, trends etc. AI is also incredible when it comes to entertainment, art and litterature, mimicking famous writers on a dime. If the internet was the great flattener, it seems like AI is the great differentiator: a necessary tool to use if you want to assimilate information quickly. AI startup companies, on the other hand, are becoming commodities, like Palo Alto restaurants (in my view). There is only room maybe for the top 5. I could be wrong. Time will tell...
Until we change it. I mean, GenAI is cool, but everyone repeating it makes it so painful.
Customer support? For real? It’s the worst user experience ever to talk to a bot. And it probably always will be. It’s like the worst area to hype for AI.
AI has already profoundly changed life for me and a few people in my proximity. It's just so convenient to ask chatGPT for anything with the speech-to-text function, or have LLMs brainstorm ideas with me. I do more and more things with AI, and really love it.
Tesla is making big strides with self driving - their ChatGPT moment is likely sometime in the next 18 months.
Take a picture of piece of paper full of data , upload into chat gpt , prompt : extrect data matching these fields , copy that data...done . that saved me 1 week of data entry work ... now u figure ...if this really gets smart its over for data entry people
The use case I’m waiting for is going to my bank app, through voice I would send money to person X, all done through AI without me manually selecting beneficiary, amount etc etc to send. This is gamechanging
(Click-To-Power IRL)
That's what the ultimate
expectation towards AI.
No one wants an AI to handle customer service. Customer service is more about the customer being heard and valued, solving issues are secondary. Nothing feels more disconnected than an AI machine handling your inquiries.
What do you mean? Are you going to customer support as to therapist or what?)
Profoundly disagree.
I’m tired of waiting on hold forever or having human customer support agents unable to handle basic requests, transfer me to their manager’s manager, waiting 3 hours to be able to re-book a cancelled flight, etc.
I cannot wait until every customer support agent is an AI system and my calls get answered immediately.
@@CashCopMineZ Exactly!
The real AI innovation is when chatGPT can read your thoughts and you can order it through your mind alone
THE HUMAN MIND IS AN ALGORITHM TOO
Ashton Shores
Google? Are you not using perplexity? It’s better than google at everything except when looking for local businesses or directions.
I saw DM I click! ❤
Wait until AI turns Google Street View into a 3d game like GTA where you can drive around. It is coming very soon.
💀
Thats a boring game. Games aren't supposed to mimic reality
Ah yes, and the entire 3D world will be stored where? Do you know how large that would be?
...you don't need AI for that
@@wfwefwwgwrgwe Yeah thats a great point, especially if you consider that video games are already hundreds of gigabytes to install today and they are a much smaller world.
not a lot of talk on how fast homework can be done now
Progressive educators haven't been a fan of "homework" for decades now. Work that is done outside of class time? Yes, of course, but homework is most often just busywork that doesn't help a student retain what we want them to retain.
Teachers that still assign homework because they think it is rigorous or something kinda deserve all the ChatGPT answers they get. That said... kids are quickly coming to the idea that they simply never need to actually *learn* anything because ChatGPT can just tell them literally anything they might need to know. This is having an impact on students' ability to think logically, thinking critically, and think step-by-step.
Homework is BS, but students that think ChatGPT can replace the skill of critical thinking are... not thinking critically.
Great point at the end, ai is going to have the biggest impact on experiences that can’t get much worse 😂
I will say this about United Airlines. I was traveling internationally, I missed my flight completely by my own fault, I was open and honest with them and the lady on the line went beyond to try to help me. Unfortunately, in that particular instance, my card also declined, but I ended up with an extremely positive perception of United's customer service.
fast food drive-thru ordering ftw
❤nice vid
Wouldn't it be something if you have a submit in this current batch looking to address the very gap you're talking about? I'm sure you do.
Gentlemen, your insights are great. Just spare us the “giggles”
The giggles are actually awesome for me hahah ... I am a person who laughs often so l can relate haha
They make deliberate signs that they are not AI themselves
You may not like it, but this is just how many Americans and Canadians talk.
It's knocked my socks off...many times infact.
Its blown my mind r u kidding
But how profitable will it be? What if, before we see much of the benefits and profits, we see layoffs and pain first?
Perhaps AI will first cannabalize programming and tech jobs first. That would be ironic. Actually, it is likely that the tech industry will be the first and most disrupted. Maybe we are seeing that already. Perhaps the layoffs that have occured in the last two years were just the first of many waves.
Also, this video focuses on Uber and so called the so-called "sharing" economy. Do you or Uber share your money to help pay for the car repairs and health insurance and below minimum wage the drivers often get?
I used to like Sam Altman a lot. But he clearly has changed his ethics and his philosophy from when OpenAI started. Y Combinator is different as well. I don't know yet what to make of it all, but it feels a bit like a dark harbinger. Like you, most of you techies, don't live in the same world as the rest of us. So are you building a world for yourself or for us or for everyone?
Clark Barbara Brown Barbara Perez Daniel
Perplexity is so good that folks even can’t mention it’s name
Then why is it unprofitable
@chunkyMunky329 some great companies didn't make a profit until it reached a certain level.
Garcia Frank White Kevin Garcia Ruth
Taylor Ruth Gonzalez Anthony Wilson Steven
AI chat can be useful, but it also can be incredibly dumb and useless. In fact, AI can be a real danger because it can give totally incorrect or misleading answers. It can act in a parrot fashion as it affirms things you say but are in fact wrong.
Lewis Angela Smith Angela Miller Kevin
obviously these goofs have never actually used A.I.
You actually think this video was created by humans? ❤
Young Carol Martin Christopher Martin Margaret
I wonder how much money they have invested on AI.
All 😂
A lot
Lewis Sandra Perez Brenda Wilson Betty
Our app is exactly what you're looking for.
why are these goons making videos and not evaluating F24 applications?!!
ai does most of it
ehh. ill fix the knock your socks off AI problem
Spirit 💯
guys i'm just starting out as an AI enthusiast,
would love your feedback as i make similar stuff