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nritchie | 10 months ago

I wonder the complete opposite. On Hacker News, people are excited about AI. Outside this bubble, in the real world, less so.

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uh_uh|10 months ago

I read more sceptical takes about AI on Hacker News than anywhere else (since I stopped following Gary Marcus, at least). My hunch is that some people here might feel professionally threatened about it so they want to diminish it. This is less of an issue with some of the 'normies' that I know. For them AI is not professionally threatening but use it to translate stuff, ideate about cupcake recipes, use it as a psychologist (please don't shoot the messenger) or help them lesson plan to teach kids.

JohnFen|10 months ago

> My hunch is that some people here might feel professionally threatened about it so they want to diminish it.

I don't think it's this. At least, I don't see a lot of that. What I do see a lot of is people realizing that AI is massively overhyped, and a lot of companies are capitalizing on that.

Until/unless it moves on from the hype cycle, it's hard to take it that seriously.

habinero|10 months ago

Speaking as a software engineer, I'm not at all threatened by it. I like Copilot as fancy autocomplete when I'm bashing out code, but that's the easy part of my job. The hard part is understanding problems and deciding what to build, and LLMs can't do that and will never be able to do that.

What I am annoyed by is having to tell users and management "no, LLMs can't do that" over and over and over and over and over. There's so much overhype and just flat out lying about capabilities and people buy into it and want to give decision making power to the statistics model that's only right by accident. Which: No.

It's a fun toy to play with and it has some limited uses, but fundamentally it's basically another blockchain: a solution in search of a problem. The set of real world problems where you want a lot of human-like writing but don't need it to be accurate is basically just "autocomplete" and "spam".

johnfn|10 months ago

HN is a highly technical audience, and AI is showing the most benefit on highly technical tasks, so it seems logical to me that HN would be more excited than "the real world". (What is the real world, btw? Do people on HN not exist in the real world?)

bigstrat2003|10 months ago

> AI is showing the most benefit on highly technical tasks

It must be truly abysmal everywhere else then, because it doesn't show much value on highly technical tasks when I try.

Conscat|10 months ago

My sister, who is a pretty technical kinesiology PhD student, does not know how to input Alt+F4 and insists that is esoteric knowledge. There's a litmus test for how out of touch HN users may be with the way normal people use computers.

paulkrush|10 months ago

I meet a non-technical woman using it all day long to help manage a landscaping business. This was a data point for me.

oytis|10 months ago

Anectodally all of my non-tech friends seem to be using ChatGPT much more than I do.

Jensson|10 months ago

Maybe you as a tech person mostly get tech enthusiast friends? Enthusiasts are much more into trends than professionals.

jhickok|10 months ago

Is that true? I have three kids now, two of them in high school, that are perhaps more AI-savvy than me (both good and bad). I think the article, and my limited professional view, is informed by SoftwareDev, IT infrastructure and Enterprise technology. I think a lot of younger people are happily plugging AI into their life.

coder543|10 months ago

ChatGPT is the number one free iPhone app on the US App Store, and I'm pretty sure it has been the number one app for a long time. I googled to see if I could find an App Store ranking chart over time... this one[0] shows that it has been in the top 2 on the US iPhone App Store every month for the past year, and it has been number one for 10 of the past 12 months. I also checked, and ChatGPT is still the number one app on the Google Play Store too.

Unless both the App Store and Google Play Store rankings are somehow determined primarily by HN users, then it seems like AI isn't only a thing on HN.

[0]: https://app.sensortower.com/overview/6448311069?tab=category...

Jensson|10 months ago

Close to 100% of HN users in AI threads have used ChatGPT. What do you think the percentage is in the general population, is it more than that, or less than that?

firstplacelast|10 months ago

I was at a get-together last weekend with mostly non-tech friends and the subject was brought up briefly. Seemed to be a fair amount of excitement and use by everyone in the conversation, minus one guy who thought it was the "devil"...only slightly joking.

falcor84|10 months ago

If I were to write a "hard" sci-fi story of how the devil might take over the world in the near future, AI would be my top choice, and it would definitely fit with The Usual Suspects' "The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn't exist".

brandall10|10 months ago

It's because we're excited about the possibilities. It's potentially revolutionary tech from a product perspective. Some claim that it increases their speed of development by a not insignificant amount.

The average consumer does not appear to be particularly excited about products w/ AI features though. A big example that comes to mind is Apple Intelligence. It's not like the second coming of the iPhone, which it should be, given the insane amount of investment capital and press in the tech sphere.

eru|10 months ago

I don't know, I know many people (including non-technical people) that use a lot of the chatbots. (And I even heard some parents at the playground talk about it to each other. Parents that I didn't know, it was a random public playground.)

Not sure if they are 'excited', but they are definitely using it.

Lots of interns and students also use the bots.

scotty79|10 months ago

The real world is made of bubbles.