I recently attended a seminar at work lead by openAI (whom my company is paying for tools) which was billed as an opportunity to learn more about using AI to do our jobs more effectively. I attended mostly because I assumed there would be some technical discussions about the technology (which was largely absent) and maybe some interesting demos showing how someone used openAI’s product to solve technical problems (also absent). Instead, I was treated to a bizarre presentation, which felt strangely paternalistic and maybe even a little desperate? In order of events:
- The presentation opened with a discussion of the (impressive) scale of the data centers that openAI will be deploying + a little bragging about sora 2 (I promise you none of the scientists or engineers present give a shit about sora 2)
- It proceeded to a gentle haranguing focused on how we should not resist using AI, and that in every organization AI will become more popular as a few high performers learn how to use it to get ahead (ok, some demos would be great, openAI’s tools have been available for months, now would be a great time to show how a co-worker has used it solve a complex problem)
- Some discussion about how scientists and engineers tend to be bad at using AI relative to manager’s/procurement people/ executives/lawyers and others with what I would characterize as paper pushing roles where accuracy isn’t actually that important.
- Which finally devolved into a q&a. The most charitable questions went something like the following: Hi I am a $tpye_of_physical_scientist I love using your tool to help write python code, but it is completely worthless for helping me solve any kind of problem that I don’t already understand very well. For example, here is a tomography technique that I am aware of people using in another industry that I am mostly unfamiliar with. Right now, my approach to using this would be to read papers about how it works, try to implement it and maybe contact some other experts if I can’t figure it out. Wouldn’t it be great if I could just upload the papers about this technique to your bot and have it implement the new technique, saving myself weeks or months of time. But if you try this basic approach you usually end up with something that doesn’t work and while the bot might be able to give some superficial explanation of the phenomenon, it doesn’t add much to me just doing the background research / implementation myself and comes off as feeling like a waste of time. The response to these questions was usually some variation of the bot will get better as it scales and that you should be patient with it and make sure that you are prompting it well so that it can lead you to the correct solution.
Which brings to my primary point: which is that I am someone who has consistently tried to use AI at work in order to be effective, and while it helps somewhat with code creation, it isn’t a particularly useful research tool and doesn’t save me very much time. Apparently my co-workers are having much the same experience.
It really seems to me that openAI and their boosters believe (or would have me believe that they believe) that transformers really are all that you need and at some point in the near future they will achieve a scale where the system will rapidly go from being able to (actually) help me do my job to being able to comfortably replace me at my job. And the truth is that I just am not seeing it. It also seems like a lot of others aren’t either, with recent warnings from various tech leaders (Sam Altman for instance, by the way what possible motive for making Ai bubble statements unless it’s an attempt to prevent employees from leaving to start found their own startups).
I have been very inclined to think that this whole industry is in a bubble for months, and now that the mainstream press is picking up on it, it’s making me wonder if I am totally wrong. Id be interested if others (especially anyone with more actual experience in building these things) can help me understand if I either just suck at using them or if my “vibes” about the current state of the industry are totally incorrect. Or if there is something else going on (ie. can these things really replace enough customer service or other jobs to justify the infrastructure spend outs).

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It's not the messaging that spooks me out, it's the sheer size of the marketing and education infrastructure that was deployed in order to drive adoption, the speed with which it was ready to go, and who it was targeted at. Public and public-adjacent institutions aren't usually pushing people towards the latest fads, but this is exactly what's happening right now.
The best mundane explanation I can think of is that it's some galaxy-brained eurocrat scheme to Lead The World In Innovation or something, except that doing a free marketing campaign for American tech companies (which they usually low-key hate) is a bit of a weird way of doing that, and even if we go with that explanation that still kinda is a conspiracy.
Yeah I see your point there.
I'm just pointing out that you've got the messaging from the boosters and all the money being spent to sell people on it, and then there's the other side where there's messages from the doomsayers AND messaging on the political side and then there's the market's response to tall this, with evidence that spending related to AI development is propping up growth right now.
It is questionable what the real goal of all that is, if we take everything being said at sheer face value.
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