Executives Say AI Will Change Business, But Aren't Doing Much About It (axios.com) 76
American business executives expect artificial intelligence to have a large impact on their companies, but few are actually doing anything with AI, according to a new MIT- Boston Consulting Group survey. From a report: Key takeaways, per co-author and BCG senior partner Martin Reeves: Nearly 85% of the 3,000-plus executives surveyed expect AI will give them a competitive advantage But their adoption of AI isn't matching up: just 1 in 5 of the companies use AI in some way, and only 1 in 20 incorporate it extensively. "Less than 39% of all companies have an AI strategy in place," they wrote. The barriers for adoption include: access to data to train algorithms, an understanding of benefits to their business, a shortage of talent, competing investment priorities, security concerns, and a lack of support among leaders.
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Clearly it has not affected the use of spell or grammar checkers.
At least 35.03% are wrong. (Score:2)
I am quite certain that at least 35.03% of them are wrong.
Sure, when it happens (Score:2, Flamebait)
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IoT is getting a lot of bad publicity for being an enormous security nightmare. It needs a standard. Not another standard so we have 14 standards; it needs a standard that people follow. As for regulations... Congress should stop at accountability for reasonable security measures; legislating technology creates inflexibility.
I've left mine stillborn, though. I wanted IoT devices to have a near-process set-up (i.e. you have to put the devices together, tell them they're setting up, and they open a win
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Part of the issue here is that there's the popular definition of "Artificial Intelligence", which seems to be what the marketers and technology journalist have latched on to, and then there's AI research. Obviously, as with any area of science or engineering, the researchers are going to be using a far more rigorous definition.
But really I think what's being talked about here, for instance, in replacing or augmenting articled clerks with AI searches is a bit more elaborate than regular expression searches.
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is it too late to welcome our robotic AI overlords? because by "long run" you mean Christmas shopping time right?
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That's certainly an important function of the central nervous system of all animals, but our brains do a lot more than just sift data.
Re:Sure, when it happens (Score:4, Insightful)
Pattern recognition is not 'AI'.
Pattern recognition is what your brain does. So how is it "not AI" when a computer does it?
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Hard AI does not exist.
AI does not need to be hard/strong in order to be useful to businesses.
What is AI? (Score:3, Interesting)
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(With tongue firmly planted in cheek) AI is the set of problems computer researchers think computers could do, but can't yet.
Once there's off-the-shelf software to solve a category of problem, it stops being "AI" and becomes "machine vision" or "autonomous $FOO".
Re:What is AI? (Score:5, Interesting)
So long as AI is implementing techniques that work on general purpose computers, programmers will look at it and say that that is not AI, that is just code running this algorithm or that. You keep waiting for the magic to happen, and keep finding out that it is just software.
But so what? Neural nets are making great strides in specific applications, and even though we know how they work in general, the specific way they put together associations still surprises us and lets them come up with answers we didn't expect, or implementations we would never have come up with. Computers playing Jeopardy don't do anything a human can't do, but the fact that they can do it at all is a huge leap forward compared to where we were 20 years ago. And sure the hardware is a million times faster, but as the saying goes, quantity has a quality all its own.
Going back to the point of magic happening, what would it take for you to decide something was AI? And if you discovered you understood all of the techniques that went in to that, would it stop being AI?
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That's why I prefer the term "Synthetic Artificial Virtual Intelligence". So much less debate about the meaning, letting us focus on the practical benefits.
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You admit then it's just more of the same of what we have experienced the last 25 years. Why is it now suddenly AI? It's just a marketing gimmick.
The techniques were described as AI 25 years ago as well, it is just that the scale and applicability of them is hugely different now.
Perhaps where we are foundering is expectations. When I took an AI course back in college we learned about expert systems, neural networks, associative arrays and other things I don't remember, and all of those were algorithms or approaches that would be used to build AI. I have no problem with calling useful systems built on those techniques AI, even if they don't pass the
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What is AI? (Score:2)
Good question. And question is the operative word. First IMHO true AI should be indistinguishable from I. Einstein thought computers were uninteresting because they did not ask novel questions. They still don't. An AI should be able to synthesize data sets and generalize across them, posit questions and set novel goals and elucidate tasks to reach them. An AI should be able to see what isn't and ask , "Why not?"
Currently, I see AI as just a marketing term for highly capable systems that can perform tasks
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Why does it need to be exactly as smart as a human in order to be AI? I mean, cats aren't self aware. Why not as smart as a cat?
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Also your cat or dog is, in fact, smarter than the junk they're trying to pass off as 'AI'.
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Yes, I follow. But why does it need to be able to think like a HUMAN brain? Lots of animals have some intelligence without being self aware.
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I'll call it AI when it can fetch me a beer, take out the garbage, and suck my dick.
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AI is a marketing term for vaporware. It's an important tool to sell stock options to investors.
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The modern definition is basically just any implementation of machine learning. Which is funny, because the phrase "machine learning" also used to be a buzzword that nobody in the industry actually used unless talking to the media. We'd be
Still primarily in R&D (Score:2)
I think the reason few are actually doing anything with AI is that it hasn't been turned into a product yet. Ask a financial analyst how they intend to use AI to improve their forecasts, and they will give you a blank look. Sell them a product that you feed a bunch of data into and a forecast spits out, that uses AI under the hood, and they will be happy to buy it. But they don't have the ability to start from scratch.
Kind of like a study asking "Why aren't house builders using superconductors?" Because
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product support (Score:1)
I suspect the product support lines will be the first to use it, not because it's good, but because co's want to cut staff. It just has to kinda sorta work to make it tempting enough. It's one of the lowest barriers of entry due to low expectations since product support already sucks at a good many co's.
LipFlap (Score:2)
https://qz.com/1067123/stop-pr... [qz.com]
saying an undefined quantity will accomplish something is a bit of a stretch.
Overhyped (Score:2)
In other news (Score:2)
In other news, surveys show that 85% of executives have no imagination and the attention-span of a gnat. They have no interest in what's happening next quarter, let alone what might happen in a year or two.
American business executives regurgutate (Score:2)
whatever BS is included in the latest best-seller business book summaries they read, or whatever they read in that airline magazine on their last flight (you know, the article that was sandwiched between Sharper Image ads for electrically heated dog sweaters and the ad for $500 per person steak dinners). They'll do something with it when one of their hired-gun management consultants tells them what they should do with it.