Faculty member highlights the impact of Apple Intelligence on AI in The Conversation

Faculty member highlights the impact of Apple Intelligence on AI in The Conversation

October 21, 2024 at 7:04 pm  Education, Kamloops, News

This article was recently published by The Conversation Canada.

By Robert Diab, professor, law

When Apple’s version of AI, branded as Apple Intelligencerolls out in October to folks with the company’s latest hardware, the response is likely to be a mix of delight and disappointment.

The AI capabilities on their way to Apple’s walled-garden will bring helpful new features, such as textual summaries in email, Messages and Safari; image creation; and a more context-aware version of Siri.

But as Apple Intelligence’s beta testing has already made clear, the power of these features falls well below what is on offer from major players like OpenAI, Google and Meta. Apple AI won’t come close to the quality of document summary, image or audio generation easily accessed from any of the frontier models.

But Apple Intelligence will do something none of the flagship offerings can do: change perceptions of AI and its role in ordinary life for a large portion of users around the world.

The real impact of Apple AI won’t be practical but moral. It will normalize AI, make it seem less foreign or complex. It will de-associate AI from the idea of cheating or cutting corners. It will help a critical mass of users cross a threshold of doubt or mystification about AI to forge a level of comfort and acceptance of it, even a degree of reliance.

Overcoming early doubts

Generative AI has faced two problems since ChatGPT was unveiled in 2022. Many have wondered what it’s really for or whether it’s truly useful, given hallucinations and other issues that are rooted in training data. Others have doubted the ethics of using AI, seeing it as a form of cheating or copyright infringement.

But as we have learned in recent months, language models are most effective when they work on our own documents and data, as with platforms like NotebookLM or GPT4o, which can now handle upwards of 50 to 100 books’ worth of material we upload.

The output of the prompts we run — in the form of article or lecture summaries, reports, slide decks and even podcasts — is much more accurate and useful than what came out of earlier chatbots. Apple Intelligence capitalizes on this insight by pointing most of its AI functionality at user data, rather than data on the web.

Domesticating AI

With Apple Intelligence working mainly on our own data, much of its output will likely mirror the higher quality of output we’re seeing with tools like NotebookLM — compared to AI that works mainly on large bodies of anonymous training data, like ChatGPT in its early days.

Having AI work mostly on user data — and doing it frequently — will forge a new association in people’s minds between generative AI and personal information, rather than miscellaneous training data. It will likely cause us to see AI as something integral to our personal routines, like reading email or the morning news.

This, in turn, will make using more powerful tools like GPT4o or Claude more socially and ethically acceptable. Once we’re in the habit of using AI to summarize or edit our email, condense articles on the web into pithy summaries or edit images in Photos, we’ll think less about the propriety of using NotebookLM to prepare a first draft of a memo or report, or using Dall-E to create images.

‘AI for the rest of us’

Apple has a long history of making complex technologies more accessible to everyday users, and that is their goal for AI.

When word processors first appeared in the late 1970s and early 1980s, there was similar uncertainty about the propriety of using them to help us write things — a belief that something authentic or human about writing by hand would be lost.

For many, computers themselves were too daunting to embrace. But Apple’s Macintosh personal computer helped domesticate and normalize using computers to write with its graphic user interface and WYSIWYG feature (“what you see is what you get”). Eventually, writing would become so closely associated with word processing that we find it hard to imagine the one without the other.

Apple Intelligence could do for generative AI what the Mac or graphic user interface did for personal computers: help tame it, and make it seem ordinary and acceptable. Apple’s marketing team hints at this in their tagline for Apple Intelligence, “AI for the rest of us.”

If history is any guide, Apple will play a key role in changing how we think about AI. Doing many of our basic tasks without it may soon seem unthinkable.

View Link to Original Source

No conversations yet

Activity Stream

Thu, Dec 5, 2024 at 8:00 am - David Suzuki posted on their blog: Industry hijacks global climate and biodiversity summits
Wed, Dec 4, 2024 at 9:00 am - Doug Smith posted on their blog: Hiking the Uplands Trails in Fall
Sat, Nov 30, 2024 at 9:00 am - Doug Smith posted on their blog: Low Iron – Triple Lumen Hike
Thu, Nov 28, 2024 at 8:00 am - David Suzuki posted on their blog: Do these politicians understand carbon?
Wed, Nov 27, 2024 at 3:04 pm - Kamloops Film Society posted on their blog: KFS Holiday Giving – Nov 2024 – The Kamloops Film Society
Tue, Nov 26, 2024 at 9:00 am - Doug Smith posted on their blog: Sugarloaf Hill Hike – KamloopsTrails
Fri, Nov 22, 2024 at 9:00 am - Doug Smith posted on their blog: A Fall Hike to Moul Falls
Thu, Nov 21, 2024 at 8:00 am - David Suzuki posted on their blog: Climate progress is unstoppable, despite U.S. election
Mon, Nov 18, 2024 at 9:00 am - Doug Smith posted on their blog: Dewdrop Ridge – Bluebird Trail Loop
Fri, Nov 15, 2024 at 9:00 am - Doug Smith posted on their blog: Upper Grasslands Track – KamloopsTrails
Full Stream

Upcoming Events

KAG: Presences
Thursday Sep 26 to Thursday Dec 19
KAG: Stories That Animate Us
Saturday Oct 5 to Saturday Dec 28
Adult 6 Week Mixed Media Workshop
Monday Nov 4 to Monday Dec 9
Winter at Privato
Sunday Nov 17 to Sunday Dec 22
WCT: Disney’s Beauty and the Beast
Thursday Nov 21 to Monday Dec 8
Meet Santa at Sahali Mall
Saturday Nov 30 to Monday Dec 23
Gingerbread House Competition 2024
Sunday Dec 1 to Tuesday Dec 24
Kamloops Comedy Open Mic
Wednesday Dec 4
All Events