I feel like this is a normal cycle of new tech. People get really excited about all the possibilities and don’t have any experience to ground expectations. Eventually people use it enough to realize what is more realistically achievable. Then mentally shifts from “magical solution to everything” to “a tool that is good at some things and bad at others”.
The problem for OpenAI and their ilk is that the actual legitimate uses of LLMs are so few and niche that they cannot hope to pay for the immense cost of developing and running these systems. Like, cool. Sure I can use copilot to generate derivative meme images, but what’s that actually worth to me monetarily? I’m not going to subscribe to a monthly service just to access a tool for shit posting.
I feel like this is a normal cycle of new tech. People get really excited about all the possibilities and don’t have any experience to ground expectations. Eventually people use it enough to realize what is more realistically achievable. Then mentally shifts from “magical solution to everything” to “a tool that is good at some things and bad at others”.
The problem for OpenAI and their ilk is that the actual legitimate uses of LLMs are so few and niche that they cannot hope to pay for the immense cost of developing and running these systems. Like, cool. Sure I can use copilot to generate derivative meme images, but what’s that actually worth to me monetarily? I’m not going to subscribe to a monthly service just to access a tool for shit posting.
That sounds like a problem for the people dumping money into these companies and keeping them afloat.
Often known as the “Gartner Hype Cycle”