Ask HN: Any GenAI project that moves the business needle?
Have you seen any GenAI project that (1) is in use in production today, AND (2) actually moves the business needle in a material way? (increased revenue, or perhaps actual jump in productivity, i.e.: not only perceived, and so on).
In my conversation with friends, business partners, vendors, ex-colleagues, I have never heard a single successful application of GenAI beyond the gimmicky ones.
If you've seen at least one, can you share how it's used? I'm truly curious. I still can't convince myself that this is more than a bubble.
14 comments
[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 32.2 ms ] threadMight just be a PR stunt tho
On a more depressing note, translations. Translators are really hurting from LLM translations. They must focus on certified translations that must be done by a sworn translator.
Many websites got wrecked by Google's reaction to the rise of AI-generated content. The internet got funnelled to a very small number of sites controlled by 16 companies. A lot of independent websites got practically killed.
For example, one problem I had recently was my printer didn't work after buying it. We went through 12 fucking hours of "unplug and reconnect your printer". At times the guy asked me to inform when it's working and I told him you told me to unplug it without reconnecting it. Of course it doesn't work! Eventually he sent me a driver. I ran it, it worked.
Most of that lag was just from customer support being in an entirely different timezone, with focus split up over tons of different people on WhatsApp, and by the time I read their message I'm just afk. AI is just great at that sort of thing. I just want the driver file. Find me the damn driver file. Your website doesn't work or at least the search isn't turning up the right one.
I wish companies like AWS would do this so I wouldn't have to pay ChatGPT $20 to point out where buttons are. I wish Firebase's one worked.
Downside: Every now and then AI is just overloaded and your first level of support breaks.
In all of the cases that I have used them it has been for categorization. Basically in areas where we can't write enough if statements to do it well enough so the only option is human review. For the most part language models do great here.