 I recently sat down for lunch with Bill Nguyen, a respected, serial entrepreneur who wanted to pitch me on his startup, Olive. And it is an interesting startup, but I was even more struck by how Nguyen is, personally, using AI. I hear almost every day from at least one person who wants to impress me with how they have implemented AI, either personally or professionally. This was different. Nguyen has turned his life over to the machine in a way that sounds, honestly, reckless. I’ve written before that large language models can’t be trusted for anything truly important. And Nguyen had given them control over everything, including the most important things. I honestly didn’t get it. Then I bumped into him at an event a couple of weeks later and got an update. It had become crazier. The AI was doing even more, like emailing people on his behalf and setting up in-person meetings — without even checking with him. I asked Nguyen if he was scared something would go wrong. He said he fully expected something to go wrong, and that was part of the appeal. He was learning what AI could do — not today, but some time in the future. How is that possible? The truth is that most people are not using a lot of compute when they use AI. They’re paying a monthly subscription fee, or maybe even using a free chatbot. They’re getting a little bit of compute power for what amounts to a very advanced search engine. That search engine product hasn’t changed much, and it still hallucinates. If you use a lot more compute power, you can get more reliable results. That’s what software developers are doing when they use AI: One chatbot writes a bunch of code, and other chatbots check it over, rewrite it, and so on. The process can go on seemingly forever, and the end result gets better and better. As the price of AI comes down, these power users just use more and more tokens. But if, like Nguyen, you’ve got effectively unlimited resources, you don’t have to wait for the price to go down. You can also just … use more tokens, no matter what it costs. In that sense, you’d be paying to see the future. That’s what Nguyen is doing, and why it’s worth it to him to become a human guinea pig for his own experiment in how powerful AI is going to be in, say, a year or two. And if you take his word for it, the answer is … pretty powerful. You can read the whole story on Nguyen here. I think you’ll enjoy it. |