Software is no longer the future of technology

0
Software is no longer the future of technology


This article is adapted from a portion of Technical.ly CEO Chris Wink’s keynote at the Technical.ly Builders Conference during Philly Tech Week 2024 presented by Comcast.

Technology is an old word for describing what is new. 

The steam engine was called a technology. The telephone was called a technology. The washing machine was called a technology. Physical things.

Military-funded research and the relative peace that followed the Second World War accelerated ever more complicated machines. This gave rise to systems engineering and the importance of code — best exemplified by its role in the Space Race. The era of code was born.

For a generation of us, the word “technology” has been synonymous with software. When we said “tech companies” we imagined cloud computing, ecommerce and social media; when we said “tech startups” we meant SaaS and mobile apps. When we said “tech workers,” we mostly meant software developers. That’s changing.

Starting with $4.6 trillion in pandemic response initiated under President Trump and continued with another two trillion dollars between a trio of spending bills signed by President Biden, the American government has forestalled recession and stoked inflation with spending. (By one measure, the US national debt has essentially doubled since 2015.)

Besides the size of the federal spending over the last few years, what stands out is what we’re spending on: building stuff. 

The $50B CHIPS Act is subsidizing semiconductor plants in Arizona and Ohio. More than $62 million in Build Back Better funds are advancing the robotics and autonomy cluster in Western PA around Pittsburgh. Coalitions from Baltimore and Philadelphia are both finalists for $70M in EDA Tech Hubs funding for bids in biomanufacturing and precision medicine. 

The outputs are intended to be semiconductor chips and robots and gene therapies. Physical things, not digital things.

That’s not to say software won’t be involved; of course it will be. It’s just that software is just kind of baked in now — a bit like washing machines and the telephone. 

AI rules are being written right now

Artificial intelligence is a kind of software, but just about everyone is betting on it marking a new stage. Moreover, the primary limits and opportunities for AI lie with semiconductor chips, energy storage and compute power — decidedly physical things. 

So, how big is the AI moment now? Despite what anyone on stage at TED might tell you, there are still roadblocks that could slow the progress of this generation of AI. There are limitations of data sources, copyright, regulation. But I still agree something has already changed. 

In recent weeks, Technically hosted three dinners of our most recent RealLIST Startup founders: one in DC, one in Philadelphia and one in Pittsburgh. Between 30 entrepreneurs whose companies were three years or younger, most told us AI tools are part of why they plan to raise less outside financing and hire less than they would otherwise.

That view from the trenches matters because it’s harder to see at the enterprise level. I spoke last month to a lead AI engineer at a Fortune 50 retail company who was just given permission to use a software copilot. Legal is very concerned about who owns code suggested by a bot. 

That’s understandable because the AI rules are being written right now:

  • In January, a computer scientist appealed the U.S. Copyright Office’s decision to deny copyright to an AI-generated image (depicted above) because, they told him, only humans can hold copyright. To which he challenged: Then why can corporations hold copyright? 
  • Then in February, the US Patent and Trademark Office released new guidance that an AI could not be named an inventor on a US patent — but that humans can receive patents for work done with AI. 
  • Just last month, agreements of varying importance were announced by the UN, the EU and the US and UK-jointly that commit to establishing regulation for gen AI. Follow that alphabet soup.

Say what you will, but so far, we have moved faster on the threat that AI will take our jobs than we did on social media rotting our brains. And good thing, because this change is coming fast.

Before you go…

Please consider supporting Technical.ly to keep our independent journalism strong. Unlike most business-focused media outlets, we don’t have a paywall. Instead, we count on your personal and organizational support.



link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *