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Is AI here to stay?

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Jean Laval Chue Him Director| Stella Aurorae Accountants Pty Ltd Sydney, Nsw, Australia
There is a lot of talk about AI in Project management. I personally believe just like micro-computers have kept improving over the last 40 years, AI will continue to improve by leaps and bounds. The limits are our imaginations. But the fundamentals like the maths behind AI should be mastered in order to make great progress, otherwise, we will be stuck with the same 'old' AI technologies for several years.
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Kiron Bondale Retired | Mentor| Retired Welland, Ontario, Canada
Jean -

The difference here is the likely order of magnitude faster pace of change involved. That speed is where the likelihood of making some crucial errors is greater and why "some" type of guardrails are needed.

Kiron
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1 reply by Jean Laval Chue Him
Oct 07, 2023 5:24 PM
Jean Laval Chue Him
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Yes, Kiron certainly some types of guardrails would be needed. But not legal guardrails of the types that stifle the progress of AI and technology.
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Rami Kaibni
Community Champion
Senior Projects Manager | Field & Marten Associates New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
AI is just starting but to what extent it will evolve, it remains to be seen.
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1 reply by Jean Laval Chue Him
Oct 07, 2023 5:32 PM
Jean Laval Chue Him
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Hi Rami, indeed AI is just starting to come into mainstream enterprise use, although, at the university level, it has been in research for quite some time. Not to forget that the Google search engine with embedded AI was written about 30 years ago and still has no serious contender. Even Microsoft spent $150 billion to match Google's search engine but to no avail. With new computer machine technologies with higher processing speed and capacity, AI will develop in leaps and bounds in the coming decade.
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Jean Laval Chue Him Director| Stella Aurorae Accountants Pty Ltd Sydney, Nsw, Australia
Oct 07, 2023 8:44 AM
Replying to Kiron Bondale
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Jean -

The difference here is the likely order of magnitude faster pace of change involved. That speed is where the likelihood of making some crucial errors is greater and why "some" type of guardrails are needed.

Kiron
Yes, Kiron certainly some types of guardrails would be needed. But not legal guardrails of the types that stifle the progress of AI and technology.
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Jean Laval Chue Him Director| Stella Aurorae Accountants Pty Ltd Sydney, Nsw, Australia
Oct 07, 2023 2:38 PM
Replying to Rami Kaibni
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AI is just starting but to what extent it will evolve, it remains to be seen.
Hi Rami, indeed AI is just starting to come into mainstream enterprise use, although, at the university level, it has been in research for quite some time. Not to forget that the Google search engine with embedded AI was written about 30 years ago and still has no serious contender. Even Microsoft spent $150 billion to match Google's search engine but to no avail. With new computer machine technologies with higher processing speed and capacity, AI will develop in leaps and bounds in the coming decade.
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Sergio Luis Conte Helping to create solutions for everyone| Worldwide based Organizations Buenos Aires, Argentina
People is using AI from the last 50 years or more. For example, inside refrigerators which work with fuzzy logic. The problem is AI is becoming a new buzzword because the "marketing success" a tool based on generative AI has in the last years. Becoming a buzzword will jeopardize the use with the aim to add value inside initiatives.

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