Energy
AI is at an Investment Tipping Point. These Are the Three Main Trends Shaping AI Solutions Development.
The divergence between generative AI funding and traditional solutions investment reveals where developers are actually placing their bets on future innovation
Key takeaways
Divergence between generative AI and traditional solution funding is evident.
Developers are aligning their investments with future AI innovations.
Three primary trends are shaping the development of AI solutions.
The AI industry is facing both headwinds and tailwinds, and this state of uncertainty is best represented in investment numbers. Recent data published by the Stanford University Institute of Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence shows that while generative AI private investment is skyrocketing, overall global investment in AI solutions dipped for the second year in a row in 2023. Everyone knows AI carries massive productive potential, but the trends surrounding AI solutions development, and therefore the efficacy of these solutions as tools, is keeping the industry's optimism in flux.
Businesses are eager to see where they can implement AI into their processes to find new efficiencies, whether that's for an airline's passenger experience, or the invisible gains of AI-supported edge computing making rugged data capture more reliable. As we stand on the brink of a technological renaissance, AI solutions development is being driven by a trinity of factors: advanced semiconductor chips and their manufacturing, sophisticated algorithms, and expansive data collections. What are some of the ways the successes & challenges in these tangential industries are impacting the viability, further improvement, and successful application of AI for efficiency and productivity gains?
Michael Davies, a green energy economist, data analyst, and the founder of advanced analytics firm Green Econometrics, shares his own research and assessment of the various key trends shaping AI solutions development today. He gives his pulse checks on the role of AI in China's leap in mobile payments, chip manufacturing trends surrounding Taiwan, and the intricacies of AI's impact on global economies; he shares his thoughts on the state of AI solutions development, and the business motivations intersecting with this trinity of AI-defining trends.
"So, why AI? Well, for one, productivity. Secondly, efficiency gains. And with that, that sounds the foundation for learning, which enables you to produce at a lower cost and improve and optimize your operations,"
Productivity. Secondly, efficiency gains. And with that, that sounds the foundation for learning, which enables you to produce at a lower cost and improve and optimize your operations.
About the author
Michael Davies is the Founder of Green Econometrics, specializing in advanced analytics and data visualization of major economic trends and research surrounding the green economy. The company's analytics have driven business intelligence, marketing strategy, and process optimization. Green Econometrics achieved a 17% energy efficiency improvement for the New Jersey Department of Transportation, earning recognition from the House Subcommittee on Energy and Environment. Collaborating with the Port Authority of NY & NJ, they influenced the adoption of LED lighting in the Lincoln Tunnel. Michael's expertise extends to predictive analytics and customer behavior modeling, enhancing call center operations and process improvements.