We’re underestimating AI: This is where it gets interesting


Speaking on day one of the global omega-3ย industry event taking place Jan. 23-25 in Athens, Greece, Steven Van Belleghem, author and expert on technology and its transformation of the customer experience discussed the changes accompanying the advent of AI.

“Itโ€™s been like a time machine the last 15 years,” he said. “Since we got our smart phones our lives changedโ€ฆand now things are getting out of hand.”

He noted a number of societal shifts and inventions to demonstrate the “scary” rate of change, such as the invention of built-in pavement pedestrian lights in China to stop people walking into traffic to compensate for the fact they are all constantly looking down at their phones.

The S-Curveโ€‹

“Whenever new technology comes up, you see a S-curve where we first overestimate the technology, and then underestimate it, and the most interesting things happen in the second half of that curve,” Van Belleghem told the room.ย 

Exemplifying our tendency to initially underestimate technologies, he reminded delegates of how Steve Jobs described the iPhone during its launch in 2007: “Jobs said ‘the iPhone will be your life in your pocket’, which everyone thought sounded over the top, but now we realise it is a very accurate description.”

With regards to AI, he added: “In my opinion, we are in the beginning of the second half of that curve, underestimating what it will bring.”

Trust in ChatGPTโ€‹

ChatGPT arrived in Nov. 2022, and since then most companies have been focusing on how to use this to increase productivity, Van Belleghem said but suggested that we may be underestimating how it can be used.



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