Midjourney/prompt: "robotic chef, watercolor style"

Automate the Simple Stuff With Stupid Tools

This is the dumbest AI will ever be—and it’s still magic

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I have a friend who trained for two years at the best culinary school in the country. A five foot-three brunette with crackling energy, her life’s focus was on making the best damn risotto this side of the Mississippi. To graduate at the top of her class, she put in 80-hour weeks in the kitchen, all so she could ascend within the food world. 

Finally, after all of that blood, sweat, and tears, she got a job in the kitchen of a Michelin-starred restaurant in California. She had done it! Her job? French fries. For 12 hours a day, her life was dicing and frying. She did it for a year. Despite being able to flambé and roast and saute, she boiled Yukon Golds in duck fat day after day. Her reward was burns up and down her forearms and a $30,000 salary. The higher-skill-level, more complicated tasks were reserved for the experienced chefs. 

LLMs like GPT4 are the overqualified line chefs of the mind. Their task is to automate the French fries of thought. They do the simple, stupid stuff for you. IQ is a flawed metric, but it is a useful heuristic for when you’re applying AI. Think of each successively more powerful model as a person with more intellectual horsepower. 

This isn’t just a case of “this AI think gooder” for every subsequent additional version of the GPT paradigm. Just as every individual has certain natural talents, so, too, do AI models. There will be AI specialists and generalists, idiot savants and jack-of-all-trades. How that manifests today is with models focused on programming or those focused on general text generation. They’ll either be good at one specific thing or serviceable at a great many things. 

As a result, over the next few years, a decent percentage of thinking you do today will no longer be required (or compensated). 

This is a profound evolution in what tools can do. 

Old software only did two things: store data and utilize that data to automate workflows. The easiest way to think about this is a spreadsheet. You enter some information into each cell and then write a formula to analyze that data. Tools almost always do some version of both, but they’re specialized based on the market they serve. For instance, Salesforce holds customer data and does automations on top of it. Photoshop mostly focuses on photo editing workflows, but has some storage options. All software tools are some combination of these two core functions. This is an oversimplification, but you get the idea. 

Software was made like this: some task you did on your keyboard was annoying. So you wrote a program that did that annoying thing for you. But you still had to tell the computer program to “do the thing.” It was like you had all the potatoes in my friend's kitchen (data) and the world’s sharpest knife (workflows that use that data), but there still needed to be a hand that wielded the blade. 

LLMs are that hand. But instead of cutting potatoes, they accomplish tasks that were heretofore impossible for software to do. 

The Jesus is in the details

Every Sunday in Christian congregations across America, a pastor stands before their congregation. They pound the pulpit, shake the Bible, and thunder out their version of the good word. Pastors enjoy this part of their job. Afterwards comes the boring part—marketing. They need to produce a laundry list of follow-up content. There are tweets, there are discussion questions, there are emails upon emails. This is boring, dumb work, but it is necessary. 

Enter Pulpit.AI. This Los Angeles-based startup allows pastors to upload the audio file of their sermon, and it turns that audio file into all the associated content. I uploaded Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream Speech” and tada, it returned an email:

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Jon Christensen about 2 years ago

Another banger, Evan!

Evan Armstrong about 2 years ago

@Jon Christensen thanks Jon!

Donald Dunnington about 2 years ago

Evan, amid to storm of utopian and dystopian junk hitting my inbox about LLMs, your calm voice has become a great and calming source of reason and useful information. Thank you.

Evan Armstrong about 2 years ago

@ddunnington appreciate it donald—i try to be nuanced with these things.

@michaelelling63 about 2 years ago

A case can be made in a separate article as to how and why, if we are to democratize this nascent technology, we need to link information flows north-south and east-west via settlement systems. Not just between LLMs, but also between all the other interelated ecosystems. These settlement systems in turn provide incentives and disincentives across all the boundaries and use cases, improving quality, reducing security and privacy threats, managing obsolesence and ensuring power curves and standard distributions remain "natural" and not imbalanced as with most of humanity's networks. The latter is basically reducing the potential for monopolization.

Michael Koeris about 2 years ago

Ok piece to highlight the floor or tech but lacking for the depth of application and concern (trust amongst them)

Veith Schörgenhummer about 2 years ago

With "our final invention" induced doomsday thoughts in my head you always manage to convey optimism and anticipation of the future again - thank you!