Open AI CEO Sam Altman Reveals AI’s Daily Role In His Life: “It Handles the Boring Stuff—Flawlessly!”

Open AI CEO Sam Altman, and head of the company that makes ChatGPT, took a podcast, where he revealed the role of AI in his daily life. He says that AI is the best tool for ‘Boring’ tasks. Not only Sam Altman but also other leading CEOs unveiled AI roles in their daily Life. The use of AI by all these CEO shows a pattern.

Let’s find out how these CEOs execute AI in their daily lives, what patterns can be seen, what we can learn from them, and several other key information claimed by these CEOs. Let’s break everything down in this article.

Open AI CEO Sam Altman Uses AI For ‘Boring’ Tasks.

You might be thinking of Sam Altman the CEO of Open AI, which generates ChatGPT and uses AI to fulfill his complex tasks. But it’s the opposite of your thought because the CEO itself unveils the Artificial Intelligence role in his daily life.

He told Wharton Organizational Psychologist Adam Grant’s ‘ReThinking’ podcast, “I use Artificial Intelligence (AI) in the boring ways”, in an episode that was published last month. “I use it for like, ‘help me process all of this email’ or ‘help me summarize this document”, He further added.

Jensen Huang and Santya Nadela: AI Role In Their Life.

Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, a company that makes many of the high-powered computer chips, used in powering large-language models, revealed at a Wired Event in December saying, “Primarily I use the chatbot to help me write my first draft”.

On the other hand, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadela unveiled that he uses Outlook’s AI feature only to organize and prioritize his inbox, he revealed at the Fast Company Innovation Festival 2024.

A Key Pattern of AI Role In These CEO Life.

The use of AI in daily life by all these, leading CEOs is making a pattern where they are seen to be using the same as the users across all job levels. CNBC reports that all three CEOs are market leaders in the AI industry — but their personal, day-to-day uses of AI seem pretty straightforward, much like other chatbot users across all job levels.

As of the Gallup Survey polished Last year, The most common chatbot uses are coming up with ideas, consolidating information, and automating basic tasks.

Sam Altman’s Statement on AI’s Advancement.

Sam Altman gives consent that the impact of AI across various industries is still evolving and will take time. In a January blog post, he talked about AI agents, being a tool capable of handling multi-step tasks off a single user prompt.

Open AI took a step in this direction launching an agentic AI model, called Operator, last month. The company claims that the Operator can automate various tasks such as planning vacations, filling out forms, making restaurant reservations, and ordering groceries.

Not only Open AI, but also Google released its agentic AI model last week, and other companies that came into the AI arms race like: Meta, Microsoft, Amazon, and Anthropic are developing their agentic AI version, reportedly.

“Imagine that this agent will eventually be capable of doing most things a software engineer at a top company with a few years of experience could do, “wrote Altman. “It will not have the biggest new ideas’ it will require lots of human supervision and direction, and it will be great at some things but surprisingly bad at others.”

Only 13% of US Employees Use AI at Work.

Until now, it’s unclear how long it could take to become commonplace at almost every people’s office. According to a January McKinsey and Company report, Only about 13% of US employees currently use AI at work.

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