Just a couple of reminders.
Equating AI solely with LLM chatbots wis critically flawed. There are far more different kinds of AI than chatbots like ChatGPT.
Not all chatbots are the same. I've been casually playing with a few recently and there's a wide range of quality/usefulness. As far as I can tell Microsoft's Copilot (at least the free version) is utter garbage.
I did try a couple of queries on
Llama-3.1-Nemotron-70B-Instruct and it's not a complete joke. It's comparable to the better consumer-accessible chatbots right now.
For sure, LLMs all are much better fielding math and engineering workloads than anything remotely related to art, style, taste, or common sense.
In that way, AI chatbots are like most other tools: they are better for some tasks than others. If I need to whip some egg whites, my immersion mixer isn't going to do as good as a job as an old school hand-held electric beater.
And in a similar theme different people have different levels of skill with the same tool whether it be a pencil, camera, hammer, calculator, or AI chatbot. We saw this in 2007 when Apple released the iPhone. Most people's photos just sucked. When legendary Rolling Stones photography Annie Leibovitz got an iPhone, she made some wonderful portraits with the device.
One thing for sure, this is all evolving very, very quickly.
Another thing for sure is that not a dime from my own wallet is coming out right now to pay for any of these consumer-facing AI chatbot services. They are all what I consider to be alpha or maybe pre-beta quality.
Yahoo Finance had an article today on how JPMorganChase has 400 usage cases:
JPMorgan Chase (JPM) held onto its spot as the artificial intelligence adoption leader in the banking sector.
www.yahoo.com
for generative AI, all internal/commercial usages.
AI is not just chatbots who will do your homework for you. This technology is being heavily leveraged by other big companies like FedEx, Walmart, and more. It's not just about putting some AI chatbot assistant on their consumer website.