On Rohit’s point about Claude 3.7 being able to replace huge swaths of white collar work—I absolutely agree, and I’ve already baked 3.7 into chunks of my personal workflow. But IT departments—especially in the public sector and in utilities—are both paranoid and too busy to think. Many won’t ALLOW LLM systems to touch proprietary data until a big dog vendor (Microsoft, Oracle) allows it.
I think Microsoft Copilot would need to be auto-bundled into Office 365 to REALLY see mainstream AI adoption (as a product) outside tech spaces.
Excellent quote from Dean Ball: "The Western AGI obsession makes us want to conceptualize this as one godlike model that can do everything, and we implicitly dismiss product engineering and practical applications. You see that reflected in public policy, which is obsessed with big models, giant data centers, and similar infrastructure. Those are the only things we seem to take seriously and value."
While the AI research race continues unabated, China's emphasis on production may be more of a determining factor over the next couple of years. To include the robotics revolution, which is the latest China Talk I need to work my way through (I can only digest so much at a time!).
On Rohit’s point about Claude 3.7 being able to replace huge swaths of white collar work—I absolutely agree, and I’ve already baked 3.7 into chunks of my personal workflow. But IT departments—especially in the public sector and in utilities—are both paranoid and too busy to think. Many won’t ALLOW LLM systems to touch proprietary data until a big dog vendor (Microsoft, Oracle) allows it.
I think Microsoft Copilot would need to be auto-bundled into Office 365 to REALLY see mainstream AI adoption (as a product) outside tech spaces.
Tried Manus and results are impress. Also try pilot.hyperbrowser.ai , it allows browseruse,OpenAI CU and Anthropic CU
Extremely helpful, thanks.
Excellent quote from Dean Ball: "The Western AGI obsession makes us want to conceptualize this as one godlike model that can do everything, and we implicitly dismiss product engineering and practical applications. You see that reflected in public policy, which is obsessed with big models, giant data centers, and similar infrastructure. Those are the only things we seem to take seriously and value."
While the AI research race continues unabated, China's emphasis on production may be more of a determining factor over the next couple of years. To include the robotics revolution, which is the latest China Talk I need to work my way through (I can only digest so much at a time!).