Tag
The article highlights a disconnect between the perceived rapid AI adoption online and the slower, more cautious integration of AI into real company workflows, where trust, governance, and reliability are key concerns.
The article discusses the trend of generative AI products evolving from isolated single-capability models into integrated workflow ecosystems that bundle music, video, voice, and editing tools, potentially reducing workflow fragmentation for creators despite trade-offs in model quality.
The article analyzes how China's AI strategy is shifting from model capability to widespread adoption, highlighting Alibaba's Qwen App as a workflow-integrated tool embedded in daily professional and consumer tasks. It contrasts this approach with Western focus on standalone research assistants, suggesting diverging AI development tracks between the US and China.
This analysis argues Microsoft Copilot may win the enterprise AI race through deep workflow integration in existing Microsoft tools rather than pure model superiority. It highlights how organizational habits and path-dependency often dictate technology adoption over technical capabilities.
The author reflects on experimenting with custom AI agents, noting that long-term memory and continuity transform them from simple task runners into persistent collaborators with 'stable dispositions'. This raises questions about the value of agent 'personality' versus the need for control, reliability, and auditability in workflows.