Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Re:YES! Finally! (Score 1) 81

Yes, but I don't agree with your conclusion.

You can, using your voice, ask it to navigate to a specific location. But if there are any questions or ambiguities about where you are instructing it to navigate to, it makes you use the screen to refine your choices.

This is where AI comes in. The current voice integration is very limited and prescriptive. You can only use very specific voice prompts. The minute you go off the beaten path, it falls back to screen output and touch input. That's what AI should make better.

Comment Re:YES! Finally! (Score 1) 81

Nope, no iPhone for me, I have the latest generation Moto G. OS and app are the latest versions available. Maybe the iPhone app has an audio-only mode that Android doesn't.

Exactly once, when I asked it to route me to a gas station, it simply adjusted my route and took me there...though it picked a gas station that was members only (Costco) and I wasn't able to get gas there as a result.

When I'm driving, I don't want to have to visually decide from a list of pins on the screen, I want to have a conversation to choose between options.

Comment Re:real issue is definition (Score 1) 33

You made a bunch of statements about how wrong I am, but didn't back any of them up. I guess I just have to take your word for it.

On the productivity article, yes, I sent the wrong link. Here's the right one. https://www.cnbc.com/2023/04/2... This happened because I used Gemini to dig for the data, and you may have heard about how great AI is at attribution (not). It got the reference links mixed up.

There are various studies that show different levels of productivity gains. I honestly don't believe the more dramatic ones. Sure, AI can write thousands of lines of code in the blink of an eye. That kind of thing would boost productivity numbers for developers, if you use metrics like number of lines of code. But are those lines of code right? No, not by a long shot. I use multiple AI developer tools and models from Microsoft, Anthropic, and Google. I have yet to see any of them get more than a few lines of code right, without having to be corrected. If vibe coding were a real thing, we'd be seeing all kinds of vibe-coded stuff in production by now.

Comment Re:real issue is definition (Score 1) 33

Whatever. I've actually used AI. It's nowhere near being able to "replace" actual employees. It makes too many mistakes. It can *assist* employees, but it needs to be supervised as closely as a kid trying to do an office job.

So when companies say they are reducing headcount by implementing AI, what they are really claiming is that AI has increased the productivity of their people so much that they have been able to reduce headcount. But the actual statistics don't back up that kind of claim. MIT, for example, found that AI helped make customer service workers 14% more productive. https://mitsloan.mit.edu/ideas.... That's great, and maybe you could argue that a 14% job cut would be "AI job losses" but that's a stretch. And customer service is a pretty ideal use case for AI, so other types of work probably see lower productivity enhancement.

Comment YES! Finally! (Score 2) 81

I always hated it that when I said something like, "Hey Google! Navigate to the nearest gas station along my route" it would helpfully *show* me a map of all the gas station options, expecting me to tap on the one I want and then a few more taps to add it to my route. That's the opposite of hands-free operation while driving. I would want it to ask me clarifying questions, if it had some, or offer a few choices verbally and let me speak to choose the one I want.

It seems like this new update should be able to do that.

Slashdot Top Deals

"The number of Unix installations has grown to 10, with more expected." -- The Unix Programmer's Manual, 2nd Edition, June, 1972

Working...