AI and Analysis Paralysis

Keras, DataRobot, PyTorch, Alteryx Intelligence Suite, OpenAI, Aporia, Microsoft Azure AI, SAP HANA Cloud, Google Cloud AI, Vertex AI, IBM Watson Assistant, and Databricks Lakehouse.

These are just a few of the current popular Artificial Intelligence businesses available to the general public as a subscription service, each with varying costs and capabilities.

To choose the best company that suits your needs in a saturated market has become the best way to hone in on which technology to commit to. Each individual will have different requirements, including technical capabilities, scalability, integration with existing systems, budget constraints, and any regulatory compliance considerations. This means asking questions like, “do I want to use it for everything, or just for work?” are key to selecting your AI company, and having forethought that all your submitted data will contribute to its growth.

For example, an AI company dedicated to code does not require personal input on gardening, and although it will produce outstanding results to user prompts, the relevancy of information has higher chance to diverge.

The next step is to trial where possible. Almost all the above mentioned have free tiers of service available, which enable users to test the front end environment and response feel of the results from user prompts. Although they more or less resemble similar environments of a chat-box dialogue, usability determines whether users actually “want” it.

Having followed all of these steps, and still not figuring out which AI to utilise can be common. Not aligning with any particular company or oligarchy such as Google can leave people with even more analysis paralysis by having no preference – and that is okay.

Right now even if a user chooses a company which does not entirely represent their core needs for prompts, AI technology is ever changing, so whichever you choose now will be exponentially be more capable within a few months from now, despite not being the entirely relevant company to their needs. So just close your eyes, point at random and choose one! What could go wrong?