What new things has AI excelled at over the past five months?
First, coding,
per “This A.I. Tool Is Going Viral. Five
Ways People Are Using It” (Natallie Rocha, The New York Times, January
23rd). The product is
Anthropic’s Claude Code, which “can generate computer code when people type a
prompt,” and “has shown record growth” after “people had time to experiment
with Claude Code over the holidays… and users realized how capable it
was.” This year we have heard a lot
about coding being an obsolescent profession, which may or not be true, and
Claude Code is a major reason why.
Second,
expanded use for existing medications, sometimes as the only choice patients
have. In “A.I. Saved His Life by
Discovering New Uses for Old Drugs” (March 20th, The New York
Times), Kate Morgan, after describing one patient’s move from expected
death to remission, told us about AI’s finding an increasing number of side
effects and unknown properties and making new applications primary. Sometimes repurposing can start with
something as simple as asking “show us every proposed treatment there has ever
been in the history of medicine for (a condition).” We should expect, and hope with gratitude,
that there will be vastly more.
Third, faster
travel through the skies. “AI air
traffic system promises fewer flight delays” (Fox News, May 9th)
gave us Kurt Knutsson explaining that “the Federal Aviation Administration is
testing a new system designed to predict congestion weeks before it happens,”
allowing airlines to “fix the schedule early so fewer problems show up later.” AI’s capabilities for checking billions of
data points can help it, for example, decide to schedule “a flight five or 10
minutes earlier,” which in cases it has recognized could “reduce bottlenecks in
busy airspace,” or if “it could identify that a specific route tends to clog up
at certain times of year… it could adjust schedules before tickets are even
sold.” Considering the “ripple effect”
one late flight has on others, small changes could lead to saving tens of
thousands of hours of passenger time.
The key companies working with the FAA are Palantir Technologies, Thales
SA, and Air Space Intelligence, and we hope the outcome will be as valuable as
they expect.
Fourth, “From
Cow-Milking Robots to Weed-Zapping Lasers, Farmers Are Embracing A.I.” (Coralie
Kraft, The New York Times, June 5th). Although “you can’t digitize an ear of corn,”
“the industry is in the midst of what some are calling the fourth agricultural
revolution, as driverless tractors trundle through fields, drones map moisture
levels in soil and cows are outfitted with Fitbit-like devices that track their
eating patterns.” There are a stunning
number of AI-related farming developments already implemented described here,
and they are already helping this once-ailing occupation.
Fifth,
helping doctors “find answers to clinical questions,” as described in “Have a
Thorny Medical Question? Your Doctor May
Be Using A.I. for That” (Steve Lohr, The New York Times, June 8th). There are many gaps in doctor-to-doctor
communication, but there is a massive amount of available knowledge, making the
situation natural for software that can perform gigantic searches. The tool is OpenEvidence, which is
“essentially a chatbot for medicine,” and “has become a viral hit with
physicians,” as, now, “more than half of the nation’s physicians are regular
users” to the level of “30 million questions and consultations” in May
alone. When using the product, doctors
“can ask (it) specific questions or enter the characteristics and symptoms of a
patient and ask for potential explanations.”
Other companies are working to enter this field, and we can see why.
Last, if you
want to buy “items you can picture but can’t name,” you may have help, as
described in “New Amazon AI search turns words into shoppable images” (Kurt
Knutsson, Fox News, June 14th). It works when customers use “more descriptive
language” about something they want, such as “green dress with puff sleeves” or
“wood coffee table with rounded edges” instead of only the first two or three
words. “As you add details, AI-generated
images appear below the search bar.
Those images update as you refine your wording. When one looks close to what you imagined,
you can tap on it and shop for products with a similar look.” It is working now, at least through “the
Amazon Shopping app on your iPhone or Android phone,” and seems like a huge
improvement over dealing with too many choices.
What did I
mean by “nailed down”? I meant that even
if there is a colossal AI bubble-bursting, these services will continue. Companies, though we may not be able to
choose which ones, will provide them.
They will be around in five, ten, or twenty years. The controversy is over. Artificial intelligence is here to stay.
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