While AI is all the rage in boardroom meetings and earnings reports, actual adoption may not be as widespread as the impression the corporate world is giving off. Goldman Sachs found artificial intelligence adoption to be muted as companies are still exploring how to integrate large language models.comes on Asking for a Trend to expand upon Goldman's note and what analysts are expecting from AI adoption rates as far as six months down the line.
One of the pieces of evidence that they cite is this data coming from Goldman Sachs and into the Census Bureau which talks about A I adoption.And so one of the things I want to point out here, first of all is that this number right here is 30% of firms, none of them, none of these industries have gotten to 30% of firms using A I as of yet, the one A group that is using the most information is right around 20%.
But I think the one of the fallacies that, that the negative criticism in the note has is that the things that we do now with our computing will be the things that we do later with A I driven computing and I think that that's just wrong.So in other words, again, maybe the framing is incorrect, that there will be uh use cases for A I that we're not contemplating right now.It's gonna take a while to figure out what he's talking about.