Posted June 03, 2024
We're told all the great things this new AI can do for us. I just spent over an hour and a half looking for something that I want (a consumer product if that matters). I have very specific wants, I type them in a search engine, and start from there.
Not a single one, NOT ONE, of the links on the first page had what I'm looking for.
Okay, I go into store fronts. Several. Again, I put in exactly what I want. I get results. Oooh boy I get results. Still haven't found one that meets the criteria I set out. After over an hour and a half of genuinely trying, I haven't found what I'm looking for.
Now I get that a lot, most, I dunno, maybe ALL of this is on me. I have always sucked at searches. Since the first search engines showed up on America Online about a thousand years ago. But isn't that where AI is supposed to kick in??? Isn't one of the purposes of AI to help morons like me navigate the digital world?
I think the problem is the same problem as ever. Greed for profit interferes with a clean way to do anything. Want a specific product? Yeah, we're gonna send you results of dozens because... greed.
What do guys think about regarding the future of AI, particular in the consumer world. I just can't see the profit motive ever allowing a real helpful AI get anywhere. The only ones that will materialize and last will be those that don't put the user needs first but the sellers needs only.
What say you?
EDIT: This is assuming, of course, that AI type algorithms are also being used in search engines, whether they be internet wide or store specific. If I'm wrong on that, then obviously the problem is still just search engines. But I just assumed lessons learned from AI were always being used to update things. For example, in those same stores there are now "chat agents" that I'm sure are all AI. I tried a couple of them as well. Still, though, I may be wrong in assuming that lessons learned in developing and using AI has also led to better searches. I may once again be guilty of that old saying about when you assume something it makes an... you know.
Not a single one, NOT ONE, of the links on the first page had what I'm looking for.
Okay, I go into store fronts. Several. Again, I put in exactly what I want. I get results. Oooh boy I get results. Still haven't found one that meets the criteria I set out. After over an hour and a half of genuinely trying, I haven't found what I'm looking for.
Now I get that a lot, most, I dunno, maybe ALL of this is on me. I have always sucked at searches. Since the first search engines showed up on America Online about a thousand years ago. But isn't that where AI is supposed to kick in??? Isn't one of the purposes of AI to help morons like me navigate the digital world?
I think the problem is the same problem as ever. Greed for profit interferes with a clean way to do anything. Want a specific product? Yeah, we're gonna send you results of dozens because... greed.
What do guys think about regarding the future of AI, particular in the consumer world. I just can't see the profit motive ever allowing a real helpful AI get anywhere. The only ones that will materialize and last will be those that don't put the user needs first but the sellers needs only.
What say you?
EDIT: This is assuming, of course, that AI type algorithms are also being used in search engines, whether they be internet wide or store specific. If I'm wrong on that, then obviously the problem is still just search engines. But I just assumed lessons learned from AI were always being used to update things. For example, in those same stores there are now "chat agents" that I'm sure are all AI. I tried a couple of them as well. Still, though, I may be wrong in assuming that lessons learned in developing and using AI has also led to better searches. I may once again be guilty of that old saying about when you assume something it makes an... you know.
Post edited June 03, 2024 by OldFatGuy