In this engaging discussion, Gary Rivlin, author of *AI Valley* and former WIRED reporter, teams up with Barry Briggs, ex-CTO at Microsoft IT. They explore the fascinating history of AI, noting its promise that's lingered since the 1950s. Rivlin highlights the transformative shift with ChatGPT, contrasting it with earlier tools like Google Translate. The conversation delves into figures like Reid Hoffman, celebrated for his success, and discusses AI's role in companionship and emotional intelligence, painting a hopeful picture of AI's future in our lives.
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A Reid Hoffman Email Sparked The Book
Gary Rivlin noticed Reid Hoffman's new AI startup and that reignited his curiosity about AI, prompting his reporting.
The timing coincided with the pre-ChatGPT moment and led Rivlin to follow AI closely in 2022.
insights INSIGHT
People Drive Breakthroughs More Than Ideas
The book follows people because individual drive and personality often determine which ideas succeed.
Rivlin emphasizes that ambition and relentless focus separated winners like Sam Altman and Reid Hoffman.
insights INSIGHT
Machine Learning Won The Long Game
AI progress depended on a shift from rules-based systems to machine learning that could scale with data and compute.
ChatGPT changed perception by making AI conversational and visible to everyone.
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AI is not as new as we think, says Gary Rivlin, author of *AI Valley: Microsoft, Google, and the Trillion-Dollar Race to Cash in on Artificial Intelligence.*
As our non-artificial guest on *The Resonance Test,* Rivlin tells host Barry Briggs that back in the 1950s, it was thought that AI was always right around the corner. There would be a gathering of technologists who said: “Give us 10 years and we'll have this thing largely solved.” Which meant, says Rivlin: “AI was ‘a decade away’ for about 70 years.”
Rivlin notes that recommendation engines and Google Translate have been operating for a while. “Google Translate has been around since 2015. That's AI, but no one really thinks of it as AI.” However, when ChatGPT strutted onto the scene, it was something else. Rivlin says: “We were talking to it. Suddenly: AI that you could converse with. It's a whole different beast.”
The builders of that beast are his topic in *AI Valley.*
Rivlin, who was a reporter for *WIRED* in the dot-com days, returns to his old beat to document the onset of the recent, fast-blooming AI spring. He and Briggs, a former CTO at Microsoft IT, bring years of history into the conversation to offer an assessment at this moment of peak AI in Silicon Valley.
They talk, for instance, of Reid Hoffman. Briggs says, “He’s the exception to the rule of nice guys finish last.” Rivlin zings back, calling Hoffman: “A billionaire you can root for” and adding “this lonely kid who wanted friends created LinkedIn, which connects the world.”
Together they remember the dot-com days of irrational exuberance, getting-rich-by-selling-dog-food-online. “The problem was we tend to overestimate the short-term impact of a technology and underestimate the long term,” says Rivlin, adding we’re seeing a similar sort of thinking with AI today.
The pair reflect on how people used to joke about autocomplete. “I should have started thinking, ‘this could turn into sentences, this could turn into paragraphs, this could turn into dialogue,’” says Briggs.
Rivlin notes that agents aren’t “trustworthy” yet. He says that if an agent is going to “make material decisions, it really needs to be trustworthy.” In two, five, 10 years from now, “AI agents are going to be central to the work life of many, maybe perhaps most of us.”
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Host: Alison Kotin
Engineer: Kyp Pilalas
Producer: Ken Gordon