On AI coworkers, Google's antitrust cases, and Chinese manufacturing
AI copilots are rapidly improving. But when and how might the majority of professionals start to view AIs as truly capable, independent agents (similar to how we view human teammates)?
On this week's Riff, I get into the future of AI coworkers, along with U.S. government’s latest antitrust action against Google and what it could mean for competition, innovation, and America’s global tech edge.
Aria also asks me about the rise of Chinese electric vehicles and why BYD might be “the Tesla of tomorrow;” the geopolitical costs of tariffs; and whether saying “please” and “thank you” to ChatGPT is worth it.
You can listen or watch on YouTube:
Transcript: https://www.possible.fm/podcasts/riffs022/
For more on Possible, check out https://www.possible.fm/podcast/
I Help Founders & C-Suite Build Magnetic Personal Brands in 3 Months - with Lead Gen That Converts | Personal Branding Strategist | Digital & Performance Marketing Specialist | Helping Leaders Dominate Their Niche
1dGreat insight, Reid! Focusing on innovation and collaboration is crucial to staying ahead in the global race. AI and automation will definitely be key drivers in shaping the future.
Principal Research Scientist at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
1dI love the thoughtfulness in this discussion.
Pipeline Consultant @ Investment Groups/Management and Engineering firms | Budgeting, Negotiation
2dThe bigger problem that I’m having is having to skip through all the scammers that attacked me on a daily basis on LinkedIn it’s got to where there are more scam accounts and scam artist either for investments, consulting advice. There are more illegitimates than there are legitimate members.
Engineer
2dUseful tips
Engineer
2dInteresting