My friend Patrick Prill continues to dissect the growth, use, and risks of AI in our industry at the rate of an article or two a day, each one teasing out a particular thread from the very tangled issue ball. ( Here's yesterday's.) I recommend reading them for a thoughtful and detailed analysis and reflection on today's software and social ecosystems and the ways that AI is reshaping them. They certainly make me think and, as with last week's Hedging Your Bets on AI , I find it helpful to capture those thoughts as analogies, so here's another. A very long time ago I wrote a music fanzine: A5, photocopied, 50p or a quid, sold by a scruffy long-hair in a German army jacket out of a battered record bag in the back rooms of pubs between bands. I remember well when domestic studio and CD-R technology became affordable because the volume of submissions for review increased dramatically ... and the overall quality likewise decreased. The technolog...
My friend and colleague Patrick Prill has been writing articles about AI in our industry at a prodigious rate over the last couple of weeks. (Here's the second of yesterday's pieces.) I recommend reading them for a thoughtful and detailed analysis and reflection on today's software and social ecosystems and the ways that AI is reshaping them. I can't compete with the breadth, depth, or frequency of his output so, although this post is on the same topic, I offer only a short analogy. Step back in time 60, 70 or 80 years and wander through England's pleasant pastures. You will see lanes and fields bordered with hedgerows maintained by skilled workers, living and breathing boundaries, functional for keeping stock in and intruders out but also a functioning component of the local ecological web. Hand-laid hedges are habitats. Birds nest in them, rodents and small mammals use them like a road network to travel safely around the landscape, stock animals use them as wind...