Thank you: this is really helpful context that, in the case of this author, I wasn't aware of. To be honest I didn't even look at his name, I just skimmed the piece and had that sort of, "oh, it's this all over again," reaction.
> When he started connectionism was the underdog camp, and he’s lived to see it take over AI to such an extreme extent that most laypeople would honestly say that AI didn’t exist until, like, 5 years ago. I think we can all relate to how frustrating that must feel!
I absolutely agree.
In some sense the definition of AI has always evolved with time - think of how much of what was considered AI research at places like MIT in the 1950s is now thought of as being just algorithms and data structures, for example - but it has infuriated me how quickly the majority of people have equated AI with, really, just LLMs, leaving much of the rest of the field out in the cold, as it were.
It can be kind of frustrating as well when using an LLM isn't going to be the best approach - where for example ML might be a better approach with large numeric datasets, but it doesn't even get a look in in the conversation, and isn't seen as cutting edge. In some sense, that's fair, a lot of what people do with ML nowadays isn't cutting edge, but in business, it doesn't have to be cutting edge, it just has to be useful and deliver value.
Yup, well said. If you think we engineers have it tough, think of the poor AI professors — the go-to book for AI survey courses (Russel and Norvig) is maybe 75% symbolic approaches, and students are surely up in arms about that now that everyone’s talking about LLMs.
I spend a lot of time “defending” AI, and I do enjoy pointing out that basically any computer program of any kind is AI, including websites. We don’t even have a good definition of intelligence for people, it’s pure hubris to try to put a solid one onto computers!
Of course, the old (90s?) adage holds true, and should be plastered on billboards across SV, IMO: “AI is whatever hasn't been done yet.” - Larry Tesler https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AI_effect
> When he started connectionism was the underdog camp, and he’s lived to see it take over AI to such an extreme extent that most laypeople would honestly say that AI didn’t exist until, like, 5 years ago. I think we can all relate to how frustrating that must feel!
I absolutely agree.
In some sense the definition of AI has always evolved with time - think of how much of what was considered AI research at places like MIT in the 1950s is now thought of as being just algorithms and data structures, for example - but it has infuriated me how quickly the majority of people have equated AI with, really, just LLMs, leaving much of the rest of the field out in the cold, as it were.
It can be kind of frustrating as well when using an LLM isn't going to be the best approach - where for example ML might be a better approach with large numeric datasets, but it doesn't even get a look in in the conversation, and isn't seen as cutting edge. In some sense, that's fair, a lot of what people do with ML nowadays isn't cutting edge, but in business, it doesn't have to be cutting edge, it just has to be useful and deliver value.
Definitely annoying.