I'd be worried the service that suggests a roofing company or Italian restaurant would go to the highest bidder. That is, it would only contact the big nation wide chains, who pay apple & amazon, over the small local companies that give better service for half the price.
That's already the case when you use Google maps or Google search, but it feels like you'd have less control by giving the AI a single instruction
Here's a photo of what's left in the fridge. Order my groceries online for the week and email the proposed recipes.
I need to get a present for X, please order it.
I think part of the problem, is those offering AI currently, have an ulterior motive. For instance, personal assistants like Google. They made it worse as there was less chances to advertise. Alexa can buy stuff, but only on Amazon. I want an assistant that is loyal to me, not to the company providing it. If I order groceries, I want it to check pricing and buy the best value with most convenient drop off. It's getting infuriating that you have to go through 20 steps for many services before you find out the final price and timing.
Looking at our history, I doubt this will ever happen. We already have plenty of tools that make our work life easier, but instead of enjoying the gained free time, we get overwhelmed with more work.
I don't really trust AI for important tasks but I do want to see them used in video games. There already is some level of AI in many games but how much better can it be?
Like talking to an AI or just more intelligent NPCs overall? I don't really believe in the talking part as people will scream very weird things at those AIs while there trying to tell you something. I don't really see how they should handle that. Maybe LLM could be used in roleplaying games where the players all know to behave and act like their characters would.
It would be cool to have talk to text incorporated into an RPG. Instead of a set script, NPCs could have an AI framework and improvise lines based on the player dialogue.
I can't help but feel like if we didn't live in a capitalist hellscape, the increasing democratization of art would be unambiguously a good thing. I'd be more than happy to see "art as decoration" (as opposed to "art as a human means of expression") opened to being something shunted off to machines, if it weren't for the fact that this is a method that people currently use to make sure they have enough money to not starve to death in the cold. Advertising art of polar bears drinking Coke is nicer to look at than big block text saying "consume", but it's hardly a soulful expression of the human condition. Or maybe it is, which is even more depressing, but the ultimate apotheosis of this is pushing that sort of messaging to robots to make anyway.
Meanwhile, giving people who aren't necessarily "artistic" a vehicle to create art as a means of expressing themselves is also really neat, and in the hands of people who are artistic, it gives them a low-impact tool for pre-visualization, inspiration, and a new medium to experiment with. It also reduces barriers for people with disabilities to make art. I'd love to see artists training LLM systems on their own work as a way of sharing their "style" with the world — something which is difficult to justify in a world where your style is something that needs to be jealously protected against copyright infringement, which again comes down to needing to monetize your expression as a matter of survival.
I think it's horrible to tell disabled people and people who aren't confident about their art skills that their best or only option is to use a program that just reuses other people's art.
There is no "democratization" of art with AI. Disabled people can already make art, including people without fucking hands. People can make art without formal training or it looking conventionally attractive. All AI does is give you a shortcut to mimicking things other people have already done.
LLM/AI tools can massively decrease the cost of dubbing media into smaller languages, including the cost of creating audio descriptions for the visually impaired. I don't know the extent to which these uses are actually being implemented at the moment, but yeah. It's by all means possible, and in my eyes pretty cool. These uses would not replace real people, would not require unethical practices, but would still reduce the workload.
I'm kind of disappointed by the ways in which AI is being presented as a "terk er jerbs" thing in fields where it has no rightful place, the ways in which AI is presented as a "procedurally generated Netflix and chill with my robot girlfriend" hyperreal horrorshow, the ways in which AI is being used for scams. AI absolutely has its places in society, and helping with accessibility and localization is one of them.
Edit: Yes, and also writing closed captions, and arguably even using deepfakes to "dub" shows and movies into sign languages could be potential uses.
There's also how chatbots can be used as language study buddies for those without the ability to talk to actual native speakers, although I haven't had much success with this, personally.
once we have gotten past the ethical quandaries and doing it the right way. It would be cool to just synthesize voices for npcs and PC from a list of "character types" and maybe add accents for the main PC. So all games can have voiced audio (could be cool if it can also work in a retroactive way, like play a classic CRPG but have fully voiced characters would be pretty neat), which can be a mixed bag in modern day since realistically there is a budget and voice acting can take a ton of money if done right. So it means we as gamer if we can mod in new quests, we can use such system to truly expand thee game. Like I love real VA performances so I can see this as a "stopgap" so you can get the main questline done and many of the "good" side quests done but you can use this AI trained voice for the more smaller tasks that may not get as much love or as I said use it for modding.
The social media campaigns for regular people and our normal problems that can be waged. You don't have to hire an artist anymore to generate compelling drawings or photographer to take heartwrenching photos. You don't need a copywriter or a social media strategist to help you craft your story.
It's all here now, ready to be exploited in favor of higher taxes on the rich, climate change policy with teeth and the will to rip a motherfucker's ass open, and to thwart and gaslight moneyed interests exploiting the ignorance of people just trying to get through the day.
Honestly...I'll sign up to Facebook, Pinterest, Instagram, TikTok...all of 'em, just to spread that message when it comes along...
I don't think anyone will actually make it, but it would be cool to have an arrangement of accelerometers and microphones that you can put on the side of a packaged gift, shake it, and get a guess about what it is.
A harvesting robot that can tell how many days from ripe an avocado is, so the grocery store can have like... "ripe today" avocados, "ripe tomorrow" avocados, "ripe in 2 days" avocados. They'd come in small cardboard boxes, and they could just shift the boxes or signs over by one each day, and have more boxes if they get avocado deliveries less often.
Machine learning clothing/hairstyle/general fashion advice would be neat, but probably too open to manipulation to sell certain brands to be practical.
Tools to help developers put houses at the best spot on a lot, for things like water mitigation, tree safety, garden space in good sunlight, wind noise, and privacy.
Search tools that aren't terrible on shopping sites, and news sites, and research journals and things. The days of "we asked Google to do it for us" being good enough are long over.
Sometimes I look at a food menu and get overwhelmed. Would be cool if I could just ask an AI what I would like from this place and it gave me like 3 choices it thought I'd like.
If I don't like those 3 give me another 3 to choose from.
Besides the overwhelm issue, my dad had really bad eyesight. This would have been great for him to quickly somehow get a giant-print (if we put this in a tablet) version of the top 3 things he'd like from the menu. I had hoped Google Glass would have been able to do something like this for him, maybe by just reading it into his ear.
I always felt bad that we'd have to try to figure out what he'd like. I mean we could read the menu to him, but he didn't want to be a bother and would kind of just go with the flow (and pick one of the earlier things we'd list off). It's tough to say if he would have liked one of the 50 other items. Miss ya dad.
AI that designs a room-temp superconductor,quantum CPU,some new chemical that allows cheap/easy solar panel construction, water desalination method/materials,new drugs/compounds,etc.
The most important areas are fundamental physics/chemistry/material inventions, if those could be brute-forced by AI search/filtering.
The next area where i think we could replace dangerous jobs with finer robotics:
Currently the robot AI is too primitive for fine movement and precise grasping, but imagine automating everything from chemical experiments to nuclear reactor repair with micron-level precision.
A third area: AI could reinvent software testing/debugging, instead of "debugging" some AI module could trace every error and provide clues as to what happening, no more chasing stack traces and adding print to every single line. I can envision 99% of manual debugging drudgery can be automated, even crash analysis.
AI doesn't have to understand code or to write it, just understand the control flow and what is currently executing.
AI-generated fuzzing, unit tests and automated cross-platform testing, instead of arcane scripts that break every second release and have to be fixed for each new features, it could be unified into some AI service that recognizes unique requirements and run automatic tests/analysis tailor-made for the target code.
On the creative side, i hope the content generation will stop being so energy-wasteful and slow, i don't want to buy graphics cards for this but it seems every neural network/image generator even simple upscaling apps and voice generators require a NVIDIA card(AMD seem to have problems).
I'm really looking forward to the possibility of having friendly banter with an AI similar to the interactions in "Her". I think it'd be cool to be able to go about mundane tasks while chatting away to an AI with a sense of humour.
Getting anmoying computer work done. And AI is already more or less there but for now you have to tell it to generate a script (in bash, python, powershell, ...) that then does the work.
For example I used AI to generate a script that sortes through a MP3 music library based on genere, artist and album from the file's metadata.