Interesting framing. The distinction between "tool does one thing when asked" vs "tool keeps going until goal is met" is actually solid. Quite interesting on the MIT study: only 5% of AI investments returning positive ROI even though everyone claims they're already using it.
That's very true. There's become a kind of "pressure" to use AI wether that is the best solution or not. Especially from places like admin/management, that thinks of it as this magical drug that solves everything.
Interesting framing. The distinction between "tool does one thing when asked" vs "tool keeps going until goal is met" is actually solid. Quite interesting on the MIT study: only 5% of AI investments returning positive ROI even though everyone claims they're already using it.
> even though everyone claims they're already using it.
Everybody is under pressure to use it, regardless of whether it applies to their use-case or not.
That's very true. There's become a kind of "pressure" to use AI wether that is the best solution or not. Especially from places like admin/management, that thinks of it as this magical drug that solves everything.