I predict that for a while, corporations will lie about using AI more than they actually do, just because it’s still being hyped. But then everyone will stop giving a fuck.
Data Shows That AI Use Is Now Declining at Large Companies
Submitted 1 day ago by cm0002@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.zip
https://futurism.com/ai-hype-automation-decline
Comments
boonhet@sopuli.xyz 3 hours ago
Rooster326@programming.dev 1 hour ago
Predict
Can already confirm they are doing that.
The executives are building dog shit unrealizable tools right now that nobody uses. It’s purely for the stock holders.
We marked ourselves as “AI powered” . Nobody is using our AI tools after they go live. We can see the logs.
boonhet@sopuli.xyz 1 hour ago
Can already confirm they are doing that.
Well yeah, I guess I meant more that this trend is increasing.
We marked ourselves as “AI powered” . Nobody is using our AI tools after they go live. We can see the logs.
Did using the buzzword help at all with shareholders or customers though?
The executives are building dog shit unrealizable tools right now that nobody uses
Don’t even need to build them sometimes IMO. Friend pointed out that the excellent notetaking app she was using claimed to use AI and then she found this comment on reddit from one of the people behind it:
While FlowSavvy’s auto-scheduling is considered AI in the broad sense that it performs complex tasks that mimic human intelligence (and is exactly what people are looking for when they’re looking for “AI scheduling”), it does not ML/DL. Instead, FlowSavvy uses a carefully-designed deterministic algorithm to schedule tasks predictably, reliably, and quickly.
Everyone seems to be super happy with it as an AI auto-scheduler lol
TankovayaDiviziya@lemmy.world 1 hour ago
Good. So when will the bubble burst?
Tikiporch@lemmy.world 1 day ago
No one ever knew how to use it, and they still don’t. All we heard was “implement AI” but not any actual use cases.
snooggums@piefed.world 1 day ago
That's because it is a speak and apell pretending to be a hammer.
p03locke@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 hours ago
People are using it every day. You might be using LLMs or generative models without even knowing it. There’s all kinds of tools, plugins, and features in photo editing, video editing, audio work, programming, image scanning/sorting. Half the time, I find that Kagi’s AI agent is more productive than trying to waste time with stupid forum posts for an hour trying to troubleshoot a support issue.
Just because you don’t know how to use it doesn’t mean “no one ever knew how to use it”.
frank@sopuli.xyz 20 hours ago
I was working in pure software engineering and we had to attend a meeting/presentation about some use cases for it.
It’s one of things that any useful tech would never need. Do you think the airplane, the cell phone, the internet, any other useful tech you can think of needed brainstorming sessions for use cases? Hell no, they couldn’t implement their ideas as fast as they wanted because the uses are so obvious
BJ_and_the_bear@lemmy.world 5 hours ago
It works well to get a simple working example of a tech you haven’t used before. Like a quicker alternative to searching Stack Overflow. “Vibe coding” a whole app seems like too much of a stretch for the current tech though. And whether or not it’s worth the money invested in it or the energy used to run it is another area where it seems vastly oversold.
sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com 13 hours ago
The use case for AI is pumping up the stock market.
DrFistington@lemmy.world 1 day ago
If I have to spend several days ‘training’ it, turn take time to fix it’s mistakes, it’s not saving any time
TacoButtPlug@sh.itjust.works 18 hours ago
idk I think my AI infised can opener is great!
Mycatiskai@lemmy.ca 18 hours ago
I worked in logistics and there was a software company working on routing software for the company before I left, this was about 2 years ago and they were going on about how AI would route all the trucks and decide which order the deliveries would be done.
I was in a lot of these planning meetings and never said a thing about how it didn’t need to be AI it just needed to be a set of rules to follow. They are still not running without human intervention.
Rules: Don’t load too much, don’t have two trucks crossing over eachother, go when the stores are open, don’t work more than 12 hours, try to give the same amount of stops/workload to each driver.
AI doesn’t know what these things mean unless we tell it how to interpret work into rules. There is nothing intelligent about a system that relies on humans having to constantly check its work and paying extra to call that AI.
BJ_and_the_bear@lemmy.world 6 hours ago
Pretty sure that’s how the product will work but they’ll just call it AI
Mycatiskai@lemmy.ca 2 hours ago
Yeah that was why it was so dumb. There was nothing AI about it and before this AI bubble it would have just been called automated.
explodicle@sh.itjust.works 9 hours ago
It’s like having an incompetent assistant. Worth it kinda I guess? Just don’t give them anything important.
jaschen306@sh.itjust.works 14 hours ago
I work in a tech department for a super old company and we are give pretty much all the professional AI softwares and custom LLMs.
My AI usage has gone up but not really for what you think. I use it mostly for thoughts consolidation and pagination. As someone with ADHD. My thoughts are scattered and often my reports and presentations are hard to comprehend. AI has been pretty helpful putting my thoughts into a format that is easier to consume for people not on the spectrum.
I essentially dictate my thoughts in probably the most scattered brain way and the AI does a great job putting my thoughts into words and even presentations.
In my previous jobs without AI, I struggled with putting my thoughts on paper. Now I literally a top performer at work.
wizblizz@lemmy.world 23 hours ago
Breaking news, trash tech no one wanted or asked for being shoved down everyone’s throats is trash.
p03locke@lemmy.dbzer0.com 9 hours ago
It’s not trash. It’s just not the “replace every worker in every industry” hype bullshit that psychopathic CEOs are peddling to their rich friends every chance they get.
I use LLMs just about every day. They are useful tools that save time, if you know how to use them right, employ proper review, and verify important information. It is not a wizard, and it will not replace a functioning brain.
The Gartner hype cycle doesn’t crash to zero. It stabilizes. I think people have been too conditioned by actual garbage technologies like NFTs, blockchain, and to some extent, crypto. And true driverless cars have such a high barrier to entry that it’s difficult to reach any sort of “good enough” point with them without another few decades of innovation, so people ignore that tech, too. Nowadays, people are so conditioned to expect every new tech to just disappear after the hype cycle and life just continues as normal.
But, that’s not how this works.
wizblizz@lemmy.world 7 hours ago
Sounds like an awful lot of work to get the hallucinating, environment destroying, billionaire enriching, Hitler praising slop machine to work right. We’re all better off binning the trash.
BJ_and_the_bear@lemmy.world 6 hours ago
I agree, it makes a good alternative to a quick web search, at least for many cases. It’s not like search engines surface completely accurate information either, gotta verify and use common sense either way
jjjalljs@ttrpg.network 1 day ago
If AI is a bubble that pops, all the big talking heads that went on about how it’s the future and we all need to embrace it won’t lose credibility. They’ll mostly just keep their jobs. Not fair. I can be pig headed and wrong and I’ll do it for less than their seven figure compensation
azertyfun@sh.itjust.works 2 hours ago
Worse, those of us who have been sticking our neck out and saying “hey guys let’s maybe slow down a minute on investing into things that have no foreseeable path to profitability” are getting passed over on career advancements while hype-chasers are getting rewarded.
Life ain’t fair man, especially when you have a passing interest in understanding wtf is going on and a moral compass that tentatively points towards not actively and knowingly making the world worse.
III@lemmy.world 2 hours ago
Every try sprinkling in a little “my idea will allow the company to fire 90% of their workers” while being pig headed and wrong? Might bump you up a few levels - companies love that kind of shit.
expatriado@lemmy.world 1 day ago
time to move some of my 401k allocations, cuz a big slice of the sp500 pie is heavily invested on AI
junderwood@lemmy.world 1 day ago
You are not the first person I’ve heard share that sentiment!
NormalOnNSFW@lemmynsfw.com 17 hours ago
It’s such a misery managing any account during a bubble. If you hold you lose when the knife falls, if you try to time it then everything stays irrational longer than you can stay solvent.
explodicle@sh.itjust.works 10 hours ago
I always just ride it out. I already bought the asset for a reason that doesn’t change just because it’s currently in a bubble. I didn’t buy a lump sum because I thought it was “cheap” then; I bought gradually every paycheck. So that’s exactly how I intend to spend it - slowly as needed, ignoring bubbles.
FartMaster69@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 day ago
why though
ragingHungryPanda@piefed.keyboardvagabond.com 1 day ago
the s&p is an index weighted to match the top 500 companies, so the bigger companies get more money put in to their stocks. if most companies aren't doing great and a few tech ones are "holding up the market", then most of the money in your s&p indeed will be with them
FishFace@lemmy.world 1 day ago
I used AI at work the other day… I’d just pasted something into a browser and realised I need to do a load of text manipulation. Rather than copy it out to vim, process it there and then back in, I just told the AI to do it.
FartMaster69@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 day ago
truly the industry is saved
DarkShaggy@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Yeah I use it to bypass advertising when looking up obscure coding problems. But I think the point is I’d never pay a penny (see what I did there?) to use it. It’s nice and helps some places but I think monetizing the billions spent is the challenge / impossible. Plus people at my work have copilot fatigue. It’s been integrated in such a clumsy distracting way. Actually adding negative value now.
NormalOnNSFW@lemmynsfw.com 17 hours ago
I’m way too afraid of having our codebase ripped by these shucksters to use those in-IDE ones, and good open models are still too big to be run locally.
jaykrown@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Skill issue. I used AI to create a web application that extracts the serial number from an image into text. This allows us to just simply take a picture rather than than having to type the serial number manually while using a magnifying glass. Significantly speeding up the process and lowering error rate.
Jhex@lemmy.world 1 day ago
indeed, anyone with skills would have whipped that up in noetime without AI… or use any of the many apps that already does that
iamericandre@lemmy.world 1 day ago
For real, you can copy text out of images on most modern phones so this isn’t really an issue anymore
jaykrown@lemmy.world 17 hours ago
Then why was I the one to do it if anyone could have done it?
AmbiguousProps@lemmy.today 17 hours ago
You could’ve just looked for off the shelf OCR software and it would probably be better, no LLM needed. OCR has been around for far longer than the current LLM bubble.
jaykrown@lemmy.world 17 hours ago
No, I tried OCR and it was less accurate.
Shave_MyBeever@lemmy.world 2 hours ago
But not at US government contractors! Out of nowhere we have a version of ChatGPT and a new hire that is actively working on getting AI to do everything 🙄