>As someone who appreciates machine learning, the main dissonance I have with interacting with Microsoft's implementation of AI feels like "don't worry, we will do the thinking for you".
This the nightmare scenario with AI, ie people settling for Microsoft/OpenAI et al to do the "thinking" for you.
It is alluring but of course it is not going to work. It is similar to what happened to the internet via social media, ie "kickback and relax, we'll give you what you really want, you don't have to take any initiative".
My pitch against this is to vehemently resist the chatbot-style solutions/interfaces and demand intelligent workspaces:
A world full of humans being guided by computers would be... dystopian.
Although I imagine a version where AI drives humans who mindlessly trust them to be more vegetarian or take public transport, helping save the environment (an ironic wish since AI is burning the planet). Of course "AI" is being guided by their owners, so there'd be a camp who uses Grok who'll still drive SUVs, eat meat, and be racist idiots...
This the nightmare scenario with AI, ie people settling for Microsoft/OpenAI et al to do the "thinking" for you.
It is alluring but of course it is not going to work. It is similar to what happened to the internet via social media, ie "kickback and relax, we'll give you what you really want, you don't have to take any initiative".
My pitch against this is to vehemently resist the chatbot-style solutions/interfaces and demand intelligent workspaces:
https://codesolvent.com/botworx/intelligent-workspace/