Is the era of massive AI model growth over? We got the last 1000X from better compute & smaller number formats. The path to the next 1000X isn't so clear...
I'm curious to understand in what way do you think "AI has proven it's value?". Sure it has helped with answering and speech engines, but the impact still seems to be pretty low so far (OpenAI / Perplexity have all seen close to zero traffic growth this past quarter). Maybe Mid-Journey and Pika offer some benefits when it comes to generating non-copyrighted content, but the vast majority of people don't use these tools. Where do you see the proof of AI value?
There's been enough value generation from AI even before this latest wave of generative stuff e. g. every product at Google and Apple uses ML in some form.
Text generation is actively being used in marketing, consulting, ChatGPT is actively used by significant millions of users every day.
I see. AI has certainly proved value in terms of efficiency improvements in large organizations without a doubt. My point is that I'm struggling to see the "I wanna spend more on / buy this product because it is better due to AI" narrative. I'm seeing a lot of value-add, but not much of value-unlock or value-capture either. Please let me know if this makes sense.
I'm curious to understand in what way do you think "AI has proven it's value?". Sure it has helped with answering and speech engines, but the impact still seems to be pretty low so far (OpenAI / Perplexity have all seen close to zero traffic growth this past quarter). Maybe Mid-Journey and Pika offer some benefits when it comes to generating non-copyrighted content, but the vast majority of people don't use these tools. Where do you see the proof of AI value?
There's been enough value generation from AI even before this latest wave of generative stuff e. g. every product at Google and Apple uses ML in some form.
Text generation is actively being used in marketing, consulting, ChatGPT is actively used by significant millions of users every day.
I see. AI has certainly proved value in terms of efficiency improvements in large organizations without a doubt. My point is that I'm struggling to see the "I wanna spend more on / buy this product because it is better due to AI" narrative. I'm seeing a lot of value-add, but not much of value-unlock or value-capture either. Please let me know if this makes sense.