“Computers aren’t the thing. They’re the thing that gets us to the thing.”
For those of you who have watched the brilliant AMC series Halt and Catch Fire, let's do a thought experiment (if you haven't watched it, stop whatever you are doing and fire up AMC Plus, then come back a changed person). What would the characters be doing during the great AI explosion of the last few years? Joe would be in full Sam Altman mode, hopping on podcasts and keynote stages and selling everyone on the coming revolution. Donna would be focused on building out more practical applications that didn't have as much flash but ultimately made more impact. And Cameron would be taking Zuck's nine figure offer and gleefully committing corporate sabotage.
But what all of them would understand is this -- whatever they're building right now is just a means to an end, not the end. Computers were a novelty when they first came out, and now they're just another device we manage. Ditto smartphones. The internet is now just baked into our daily lives and the vast majority of the way we interact with it is passive, not active. It runs almost every aspect of our lives, whether we want it to or not.
And AI is going to get there as well. I always laugh when people tell me they refuse to use AI, because unless you go fully off the grid, it's baked in to so much of what we do. You might choose not to open ChatGPT and type in a prompt, and that's totally your right, but the technology is based into so many systems you use every day without you even knowing it.
So the question then becomes -- what is AI for? How are we using it to solve real problems and make lives better, not just have a shiny object that results in massive fundraising rounds? What is the thing that AI is leading us towards?
Because eventually AI is just going to run in the background. It won't be glamorous or sexy or the thing that inspires kids to flood San Francisco -- it will just be there, something we expect to work. It will solve problems before we even know they exist.
For instance, I get a ton of spam calls and texts, and no one seems to know how to stop them. This seems like something AI could do pretty easily, and hopefully in five years, it'll just stop these texts and calls before they even reach my phone. Ditto medical billing errors, credit card fraud, etc. The systems will just fix everything before it even reaches me. It will automatically rebook me on a flight if there is a delay and assign me a hotel room if needed. No more waiting in line. It will scan my prescription, find it at a store, and deliver it to me if desired -- no calling around, no haggling with an insurance company.
The thing that AI will get us to, hopefully, is a world where we waste less time. It's not about displacing workers -- it's about making jobs better and easier, so we can focus on the human things we're actually good at. In ten years, the only people who can say they're not using AI are those living fully off the grid, and that's exactly what we should be working towards.