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#Acceleration

3 messages3 participants0 message aujourd’hui

"The only thing we know for certain about Al is that we don't know exactly where we are going, but we are making great time." - Futurist Jim Carroll

My book Dancing in the Rain features a list of 30 Megatrends. Some folks asked me to expand on them, so I'm starting a new series today.
The first one, AI, obviously doesn't need a lot of explanation.

It's big.

It's fast.

It's not going away.

It's going to impact your life one way or the other.

It's going to have as profound an impact as the Internet has had, both good and bad.

People will endlessly debate about where it will take us.

Some are excited, many are terrified, many are both.

And the sophistication of what we can do continues to accelerate at a ridiculous rate.

As do the risks and the downside.

Ok, so with that out of the way, here's a bit more to think about. First, AI is not some weird futuristic concept - it's a pervasive reality that has already been rapidly transforming our world. I took the liberty of taking one of my recent AI keynotes and had it summarized by Google Gemini. I then fed this to gamma.app - and Megatrends#1 of how it summarized my work.

The first thing to think about is that from the seemingly mundane to the profoundly complex, AI is already deeply embedded in our daily lives. Take a look around your world - you have::

Wearable fitness trackers analyzing your exercise patterns
Chatbots that instantly answer your questions
Shopping sites recommending products based on your past purchases
Security cameras recognize unfamiliar faces or objects
Music apps creating personalized playlist recommendations
Email services categorize messages and filter spam

And that's just the tip of the iceberg. AI already powers everything around you, from autonomous vehicles and computer vision to natural language processing and virtual assistants. Algorithms are the unseen force behind Fitbits, Apple Health, Predictive Insurance, and just about everything else. In some industries - healthcare, for example - the 'algorithm' does a better job of interpreting critical data than humans do.

But that's not the key thing to think about - it's how quickly all of this is moving. It's the acceleration of everything having to do with AI that we need to think about. The explosion of AI into public consciousness isn't truly sudden. It's the result of several exponential trends converging:
Continuation of Moore's Law: The number of transistors on microchips doubles every two years, leading to ever-increasing processing power.
Collapsing Training Costs: The cost to train AI systems has plummeted dramatically. For example, the cost to train an AI system for image recognition dropped from $112.64 in 2017 to $4.50 in 2021. It's even less today.

It promises to change everything, and if we can adapt, learn, and responsibly innovate, THAT will determine our future in this rapidly evolving landscape.

As I said, we don't know where we are going but we sure are making great time!

#AI #Intelligence #Acceleration #Innovation #Technology #Transformation #Future #Automation #Learning #Opportunities

Original post: jimcarroll.com/2025/06/decodin

Il y a une inflation informatique.

Les robots programmeurs rendent incroyablement facile la production d'un énorme code informatique, avec des bogues, peu fiable, mais globalement fonctionnel.
Les projets seront plus volumineux tout en étant moins efficaces, ce qui les rendra plus difficiles à corriger, à mettre à jour et à entretenir.

La vie fera changer les exigences : ce qu'on demande à l'appli. La majeure partie du travail de programmation consiste à mettre à jour et à modifier le code, et non à écrire du code à partir de zéro.

Les problèmes de maintenance accélèrent.

A répondu dans un fil de discussion

"Un smartphone est un concentré d’industries : minière, pétrolière, chimique, auxquelles s’ajoute l’industrie du data mining, de l’extraction de données. Comme je l’indique dans mon livre, selon les données de Fairphone, il faut des composants issus de plus de mille usines différentes pour permettre produire un seul « smartphone »."

Nous sommes "prisonniers d’un spectacle dans lequel les progrès de la technologie se sont en quelque sorte substitués à l’histoire."

Celia Izoard : contretemps.eu/entretien-celia

CONTRETEMPS · Extraire des métaux pour sauver la planète ? Entretien avec Celia Izoard - CONTRETEMPS
#livre#progrès#écrans

Hartmut Rosa : Le paradoxe de la société hyperconnectée mais incompréhensible

📊 Nouveau billet : "Hartmut Rosa : Le paradoxe de la société hyperconnectée" Découvrez comment Rosa analyse le paradoxe moderne : Accélération sociale 🕒 Désynchronisation 🌐 Aliénation 🚫 Disponibilité du monde vs illisibilité 🌎 Repenser notre rapport au temps et au monde ! #HartmutRosa #Accélération #SociétéIncompréhensible Hartmut Rosa, philosophe allemand, met en lumière un paradoxe…

homohortus31.wordpress.com/202

Homo Hortus · Hartmut Rosa : Le paradoxe de la société hyperconnectée mais incompréhensible📊 Nouveau billet : « Hartmut Rosa : Le paradoxe de la société hyperconnectée » Découvrez comment Rosa analyse le paradoxe moderne : Accélération sociale 🕒 Désynchronisation 🌐 …

The impacts of climate disruption

The Lismore floods, the Spanish floods and Hurricane Katrina show in a climate breakdown
you're on your own..

People "are fundamentally rescuing themselves...I think that's something that we see again and again, unfortunately, in the absence of effective government response....Professor Mossop says the Black Summer Fires in 2019 to 2020 also saw people being "rescued by their neighbours and not by emergency services".
Australia is expected to experience worsening disasters as climate change accelerates.
>>
abc.net.au/news/2024-11-18/how

“Out of all the focus group respondents, 62% said their governments or policy makers had made no assessment of the impact of climate change on emergency services, 9% said they didn’t know, 55% said nothing had been done to prepare for the impact of climate change, and 10% didn’t know.">>
scimex.org/newsfeed/australasi
#ClimateBreakdown #FossilFuels #acceleration #climate #floods #bushfires #trauma #disasters #governance #EmergencyServices #state #SocialVulnerability #society #citizens #abandonment #volunteers #BlackSummer #ClimateJustice #GovernmentAbsence

ABC News · What Australia can learn from Spain's recent deadly floodsPar Jesmine Cheong