OK, and my point is that people are using the term “AI” so loosely as to be indistinguishable from “algorithm”.
We’ll still have the statistical protein folding models after this bubble eventually pops, we’re just not gonna call it “AI”. It’s a trendy marketing department word, and its usefulness as a description in Computer Science is rapidly diminishing.
overheard, rumored, etc: advances in ai are then quickly popularized, to the point where they’re no longer thought of as ai. then people look at the main ai field, and think “why haven’t they done any ai work?”
OK, and my point is that people are using the term “AI” so loosely as to be indistinguishable from “algorithm”.
We’ll still have the statistical protein folding models after this bubble eventually pops, we’re just not gonna call it “AI”. It’s a trendy marketing department word, and its usefulness as a description in Computer Science is rapidly diminishing.
overheard, rumored, etc: advances in ai are then quickly popularized, to the point where they’re no longer thought of as ai. then people look at the main ai field, and think “why haven’t they done any ai work?”