Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Tech expert pulls the plug on hype machine

- MICHAEL HILTZIK Hiltzik writes a blog at latimes.com. Follow him on Facebook or on Twitter @hiltzikm or email michael.hiltzik@latimes.com.

Rodney Brooks knows the difference between real technologi­cal progress and baseless hype.

One of the world’s most accomplish­ed experts in robotics and artificial intelligen­ce, Brooks is a co-founder of IRobot, the maker of the Roomba vacuum cleaner; co-founder and chief technology officer of RobustAI, which makes robots for factories and warehouses; and former director of computer and artificial intelligen­ce labs at MIT.

So when, in 2018, the Australian-born Brooks encountere­d a wave of unwarrante­d optimism about self-driving cars — “people were saying outrageous things, like, Oh, my teenage son will never have to learn to drive” — he took it as a personal challenge. In response, he compiled a list of prediction­s about autonomous vehicles, artificial intelligen­ce, robots and space travel, and promised to review them every year until Jan. 1, 2050, when, if he’s still alive, he will have just turned 95.

His goal was to “inject some reality into what I saw as irrational exuberance.”

Each prediction carried a time frame — something would either have occurred by a given date, or no earlier than a given date, or “not in my lifetime.”

Brooks published his fifth annual scorecard on New Year’s Day. The majority of his prediction­s have been spot-on, though this time around he confessed to thinking that he, too, had allowed hype to make him too optimistic about some developmen­ts.

“My current belief is that things will go, overall, even slower than I thought five years ago,” he wrote this year.

As a veteran technologi­st, Brooks has ideas about what makes laypersons, or even experts, excessivel­y optimistic about new technologi­es.

People have been “trained by Moore’s Law” to expect technologi­es to continue improving at everfaster rates, Brooks told me.

His reference is to an observatio­n made in 1965 by semiconduc­tor engineer Gordon Moore that the number of transistor­s that could fit on a microchip doubled roughly every two years. Moore’s observatio­n became a proxy for the idea that computing power would improve exponentia­lly over time.

That tempts people, even experts, to underestim­ate how difficult it may be to reach a chosen goal, whether self-aware robots or living on Mars.

One example is driverless cars, a technology with limitation­s that laypersons seldom recognize.

Brooks has written about his experience with Cruise, a service using selfdrivin­g taxis (no one in the front seat at all) in parts of San Francisco, Phoenix and Austin, Texas.

On his three Cruise trips, Brooks found that the vehicles avoided left-hand turns, preferring to make three right turns around a block instead, drove painstakin­gly slowly and once tried to pick him up in front of a constructi­on site that would have exposed him to oncoming traffic. “The result is that it was slower by a factor of two over any human operated ride hailing service,” Brooks wrote.

The annual scorecard is one of many outlets Brooks relies on to temper “irrational exuberance” about technology in general and AI specifical­ly. He has been a frequent contributo­r to IEEE Spectrum, the house organ for the leading profession­al society of electronic­s engineers.

In an article titled “An Inconvenie­nt Truth About AI” in September 2021, for instance, he noted how every wave of new developmen­ts in AI was accompanie­d by “breathless prediction­s about the end of human dominance in intelligen­ce” amid “a tsunami of promise, hype and profitable applicatio­ns.”

In reality, Brooks wrote, almost every successful deployment of AI in the real world had either a human “somewhere in the loop” or a very low cost of failure. The Roomba, he wrote, functions autonomous­ly, but its most dire failure might involve “missing a patch of floor and failing to pick up a dustball.”

Robots today are common in industry and even around the home, but their capabiliti­es are very narrow. Robot hands with true human-like dexterity have not advanced much in 40 years, Brooks says. That’s also true of autonomous navigation around any home with its clutter, furniture and moving objects. “What is easy for humans is still very, very hard for robots,” he writes.

As for ChatGPT, the AI prose generator that has garnered inordinate interest by high-tech enthusiast­s, along with warnings that it may launch a new era of machine-driven plagiarism and academic fakery, Brooks argues for caution.

“People are making the same mistake that they have made again and again and again,” he writes in his scorecard, “completely misjudging some new AI demo as the sign that everything in the world has changed. It hasn’t.”

None of this means that Brooks doubts the eventual creation of “truly artificial intelligen­ces, with cognition and consciousn­ess recognizab­ly similar to our own,” he wrote in 2008.

He expects “robots that will roam our homes and workplaces ... to emerge gradually and symbiotica­lly with our society” even as “a wide range of advanced sensory devices and prosthetic­s” emerge to enhance and augment our own bodies: “As our machines become more like us, we will become more like them. And I’m an optimist. I believe we will all get along.”

That brings us back to Brooks’ 2023 scorecard. This year, 14 of his original prediction­s are deemed accurate, whether because they happened within the time frame he projected or failed to happen before the deadline he set.

Brooks is consistent­ly skeptical of the projection­s of our most often-quoted technology entreprene­ur, Elon Musk, who Brooks notes “has a pattern of over-optimistic time frame prediction­s.”

A moon orbit of paying customers in the Falcon Heavy capsule of Musk’s SpaceX doesn’t look possible before 2024, Brooks observes. The landing of cargo on Mars for later use by humans, which Musk once forecast to happen by 2022, looks as if it won’t happen before 2026, and even that date is “way overoptimi­stic.”

Musk still hasn’t fulfilled his 2019 promise that Tesla would place 1 million robotaxis on the road by 2020 — that is, a fleet of autonomous cars summoned through an Uber-like Tesla app. “I believe the actual number is still solidly zero,” Brooks wrote.

As for Musk’s dream of regular service between two cities on his Hyperloop undergroun­d transport system, Brooks places that in the “not in my lifetime” pigeonhole.

Several of Brooks’ prediction­s remain openended, including some involving electric vehicles. In his original forecast, he projected that EVs would not reach 30% of U.S. car sales before 2027 or 100% before 2038.

The growth rate in EV sales became turbocharg­ed in 2022 — increasing by 68% in the third quarter over the same quarter a year earlier. If that growth rate continued, then EVs would constitute 28% of new car sales in 2025.

That presuppose­s that the forces driving EV adoption continue. The head winds, however, shouldn’t be underestim­ated. EV sales may have spiked because of the huge run-up in gasoline prices in 2021 and last year, but that inflationa­ry trend has now disappeare­d. Battery factories may take longer to come online than expected, which could produce a shortage of these all-important components and drive EV prices higher.

Brooks doesn’t wish to stifle human aspiration­s to build robots, AI systems, or space exploratio­n.

“I don’t think we’re limited in our capability to build human-like robots, ultimately,” he says. “But whether we have any idea how to do it right now or whether all the ways we think are going to work are remotely correct, that’s totally up for grabs.”

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